45

Are there cases when you would want a public readonly field v.s. a get-only auto-implemented property?

public class Foo
{
    public readonly string Hello;

    public string Hello2 { get; }
}

Both can only be set during the constructor and both offer readonly access outside of the class.. I'm a little tired so I might be missing something.

0

2 Answers 2

39

Making it a property rather than a field means it can be used on interfaces.

The exact implementation (although auto-properties don't really have much implementation...) is also abstracted, so you could in the future base it on a combination of fields without breaking (compile) compatibility.

2
  • Great example thanks, I knew there was something obvious I was missing here. The context I was wondering about was the Startup.cs in the default asp.net core template, interestingly Startup doesn't implement an interface, but perhaps the property is used as a hook elsewhere. Oct 14, 2016 at 9:18
  • 5
    I really want to mark your's and PaulF's as the answer, as they both make sense his was slightly sooner, but if I could I'd mark yours as well! Oct 14, 2016 at 9:23
20

One reason would be for data binding - .net implements binding to properties but not to public fields.

Some discussion here : Why can't we use public fields for data binding in C#?

0

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