I want to use information hiding with a set accessor of a property. So I want to trigger the set accessor without putting any value in it. In the set acessor is the initialisation of the value, like this :
/// <summary>
/// load short ref controls
/// </summary>
/// <param name="reset">(re)set cached list</param>
public List<ShortRef_Control> ShortRefControls
{
// (re)set cached list
set
{
tableDictionary["refcontrols"] =
(from src in dataContext.ShortRef_Controls select src).ToList();
}
// return cached list
get
{
return tableDictionary.Get<List<ShortRef_Control>>("refcontrols");
}
}
Question: Why I want to do this?
Answer: I also want to reset this, I use a cached list of a table. When information in this list is updated I want to refresh the cached list. I don't want to use difficult readable setters for this and so want to hide the setter initialisation.
Possible not so great solution :
ShortRefControls = null
Is the C# language missing something? Or am I (mis)using properties this way. ShortRefControls = null
works but If another collegue of mine is maintaining this code he could get the impression ShortRefControls value is set to null.
The best solution I can come up with is to don't use properties for this and Use a separate GetShortRefControls() and SetShortRefControls() function.
UPDATE: I (ahum...my collegue ;-) came up with this :
/// <summary>
/// load short ref controls
/// </summary>
private void SetShortRefControls() => ShortRefControls = (from src in dataContext.ShortRef_Controls select src).ToList();
This private function is used as the setter value. In some way its behaving like an alias or a wrapper for the setter. Whats wrong with this? Its an extra function that would not really be needed.
C# version x? Is it strange to think that ShortRefControls<
is initializing with no value, is a way to handle this in a future version of C#. The < character could be off course any character, meaning an self initialize character.