I use a log property in my class that is intended only for debugging purposes.
Note: I do not use any existing logger packet, as I manage a large lists of objects each of them having its own (!) log.
As it is not used in release mode, it is enclosed by a preprocessor directive:
#if DEBUG
public List<LogItem> DebugLog { get; }
#endif
Unfortunately, I need to initialize and copy this property a few times, leading to messy code like this:
public MyClass(object parameterA, object parameterB, ...,
#if DEBUG
, List<LogItem> debugLog
#endif
) {
throw new NotImplementedException();
}
Whilst for actual logging, I wrote a [Conditional("DEBUG")]
method, I am not aware of any possibility avoiding this ugly and idiom-violating directives for noting arguments and parameters. The ConditionalAttribute appears to be only applicable on properties and attributes.
I am wondering whether there is any design pattern for this problem enabling a better readability. I am looking forward to your ideas!
List<Log>
, that's very weird. Why exactly aren't you just calling your conditional logger?Debug
andRelease
mode and initialize it only once