First off, I have read through a list of postings on this topic and I don't feel I have grasped properties because of what I had come to understand about encapsulation and field modifiers (private, public..ect).
One of the main aspects of C# that I have come to learn is the importance of data protection within your code by the use of encapsulation. I 'thought' I understood that to be because of the ability of the use of the modifiers (private, public, internal, protected). However, after learning about properties I am sort of torn in understanding not only properties uses, but the overall importance/ability of data protection (what I understood as encapsulation) within C#.
To be more specific, everything I have read when I got to properties in C# is that you should try to use them in place of fields when you can because of:
1) they allow you to change the data type when you can't when directly accessing the field directly.
2) they add a level of protection to data access
However, from what I 'thought' I had come to know about the use of field modifiers did #2, it seemed to me that properties just generated additional code unless you had some reason to change the type (#1) - because you are (more or less) creating hidden methods to access fields as opposed to directly.
Then there is the whole modifiers being able to be added to Properties which further complicates my understanding for the need of properties to access data.
I have read a number of chapters from different writers on "properties" and none have really explained a good understanding of properties vs. fields vs. encapsulation (and good programming methods).
Can someone explain:
1) why I would want to use properties instead of fields (especially when it appears I am just adding additional code
2) any tips on recognizing the use of properties and not seeing them as simply methods (with the exception of the get;set being apparent) when tracing other peoples code?
3) Any general rules of thumb when it comes to good programming methods in relation to when to use what?
Thanks and sorry for the long post - I didn't want to just ask a question that has been asked 100x without explaining why I am asking it again.
1) why I would want to use properties
instead of fields (especially when it
appears I am just adding additional
code
You should always use properties where possible. They abstract direct access to the field (which is created for you if you don't create one). Even if the property does nothing other than setting a value, it can protect you later on. Changing a field to a property later is a breaking change, so if you have a public field and want to change it to a public property, you have to recompile all code which originally accessed that field.
2) any tips on recognizing the use of
properties and not seeing them as
simply methods (with the exception of
the get;set being apparent) when
tracing other peoples code?
I'm not totally certain what you are asking, but when tracing over someone else's code, you should always assume that the property is doing something other than just getting and setting a value. Although it's accepted practice to not put large amounts of code in getters and setter, you can't just assume that since it's a property it will behave quickly.
3) Any general rules of thumb when it
comes to good programming methods in
relation to when to use what?
I always use properties to get and set methods where possible. That way I can add code later if I need to check that the value is within certain bounds, not null etc. Without using properties, I have to go back and put those checks in every place I directly accessed the field.
One of the nice things about Properties is that the getter and the setter can have different levels of access. Consider this:
public class MyClass {
public string MyString { get; private set; }
//...other code
}
This property can only be changed from within, say in a constructor. Have a read up on Dependency Injection. Constructor injection and Property injection both deal with setting properties from some form of external configuration. There are many frameworks out there. If you delve into some of these you will get a good feel for properties and their use. Dependency injection will also help you with your 3rd question about good practice.
When looking at other people's code, you can tell whether something is a method or a property because their icons are different. Also, in Intellisence, the first part of a property's summary is the word Property.
You should not worry about the extra code needed for accessing fields via properties, it will be "optimized" away by the JIT compiler (by inlining the code). Except when it is too large to be inlined, but then you needed the extra code anyway.
And the extra code for defining simple properties is also minimal:
public int MyProp { get; set; } // use auto generated field.
When you need to customize you can alway define your own field later.
So you are left with the extra layer of encapsulation / data protection, and that is a good thing.
My rule: expose fields always through properties
While I absolutely dislike directly exposing fields to the public, there's another thing: Fields can't be exposed through Interfaces; Properties can.
There are several reasons why you might want to use Properties over Fields, here are just a couple:
a. By having the following
public string MyProperty { get; private set; }
you are making the property "read only". No one using your code can modify it's value. There are cases where this isn't strictly true (if your property is a list), but these are known and have solutions.
b. If you decide you need to increase the safety of your code use properties:
public string MyProperty
{
get { return _myField; }
set
{
if (!string.IsNullOrEmpty(value))
{
_myField = value;
}
}
}
You can tell they're properties because they don't have (). The compiler will tell you if you try to add brackets.
It's considered good practise to always use properties.
There are many scenarios where using a simple field would not cause damage, but
a Property can be changed more easily later, i.e. if you want to add an event whenever the value changes or want to perform some value/range checking.
Also, If you have several projects that depend on each other you have to recompile all that depend on the one where a field was changed to a property.
Using fields is usually practiced in private classes that is not intended to share data with other classes, When we want our data to be accessible by other classes we use properties which has the ability to share data with other classes through get and set which are access methods called Auto Properties that have access to data in private classes, also you can use both with access modifiers Full Property in the same class allowing the class to use data privately as data field and in the same time link the private field to a property that makes the data accessible to other classes as well, see this simple example:
private string _name;
public string Name
{
get
{
return _name;
}
set
{
_name = value;
}
}
The private string _name is used by the class only, while the Name property is accessible by other classes in the same namespace.
why I would want to use properties instead of fields (especially when it appears I am just adding additional code
You want to use properties over fields becuase, when you use properties you can use events with them, so in a case when you want to do some action when a property changes, you can bind some handlers to PropertyChanging or PropertyChanged events. In case of fields this is not possible. Fields can either be public or private or protected, in case of props you can make them read-only publicly but writable privately.
any tips on recognizing the use of properties and not seeing them as simply methods (with the exception of the get;set being apparent) when tracing other peoples code?
A method should be used when the return value is expected to be dynamic every-time you call, a property should be used when the return value is not that greatly dynamic.
Any general rules of thumb when it comes to good programming methods in relation to when to use what?
Yes, I strongly recommend to read Framework Design guidelines for best practices of good programming.
Properties are the preferred way to cover fields to enforce encapsulation. However, they are functional in that you can expose a property that is of a different type and marshal the casting; you can change access modifiers; they are used in WinForms data binding; they allow you to embed lightweight per-property logic such as change notifications; etc.
When looking at other peoples code, properties have different intellisense icons to methods.
If you think properties are just extra code, I would argue sticking with them anyway but make your life easier by auto-generating the property from the field (right-click -> Refactor -> Encapsulate Field...)
Properties allow you to do things other than set or get a value when you use them. Most notably, they allow you to do validation logic.
A Best Practice is to make anything exposed to the public a Property. That way, if you change the set/get logic at a later time, you only have to recompile your class, not every class linked against it.
One caveat is that things like "Threading.Interlocked.Increment" can work with fields, but cannot work with properties. If two threads simultaneously call Threading.Interlocked.Increment on SomeObject.LongIntegerField, the value will get increased by two even if there is no other locking. By contrast, if two threads simultaneously call Threading.Interlocked.Increment on SomeObject.LongIntegerProperty, the value of that property might get incremented by two, or by one, or by -4,294,967,295, or who knows what other values (the property could be written to use locking prevent values other than one or two in that scenario, but it could not be written to ensure the correct increment by two).
I was going to say Properties (setters) are a great place to raise events like NotifyPropertyChanged, but someone else beat me to it.
Another good reason to consider Properties: let's say you use a factory to construct some object that has a default constructor, and you prepare the object via its Properties.
new foo(){Prop1 = "bar", Prop2 = 33, ...};
But if outside users new up your object, maybe there are some properties that you want them to see as read-only and not be able to set (only the factory should be able to set them)? You can make the setters internal - this only works, of course, if the object's class is in the same assembly as the factory.
There are other ways to achieve this goal but using Properties and varying accessor visibility is a good one to consider if you're doing interface-based development, or if you expose libraries to others, etc.
Related
I am aware of the advantages of using properties over fields, like being able to provide additional logic when required in the future.
But I really wonder why it's not possible to use public fields for data binding or even for JSON serializers like JavaScriptSerializer class.
Is there any good reason to ignore public fields in these cases? Or is it just some kind of convention? Or just to force users to use properties?
The short version is that always using properties instead of public (or, really, even protected) fields has been a fundamental design choice in .NET since the very beginning.
The slightly longer version is that adding support for public fields would add complexity to the data binding framework (whichever one you're referring to). Fields also lack any kind of support for change notification, which is a fairly important aspect of data binding (at least in a stateful environment like Winforms development). Even at the level of retrieving and setting values, fields and properties are different; while the syntax in VB.NET or C# for retrieving or setting the value of a property is (by design) the same as that of a field, the mechanism used to do this in a programmatic scenario like data binding is different for properties vs. fields.
In the end, this all just means that it would take more work to add support for public fields to any data binding scenario, so since it's an anti-pattern anyhow this work isn't done.
There is no technical reason behind this restriction: it is certainly possible to add public fields to the list of properties, and allow binding to them. In fact, there are APIs in .NET that would pick a property or a public field automatically, based on a name alone. For example, LINQ's Expression has PropertyOrField method that would pick one or the other, based on the type returned by the expression in its first parameter.
However, leaving fields public exposes you to such an array of potential problems, that the designers of systems dependent on reflection often try to discourage use of public fields by withholding support for them from their system design.
In addition, in systems that rely on events for binding, using a field would not be possible for technical reasons, because one cannot fire an event on setting a public field.
Since you can't declare Fields in Interfaces, you should not use Public Fields. All fields should be private only.
If your code depends upon Abstractions, you need to use Interfaces and here the Public Fields are not available.
When should I prefer property over method ? Because the following code is more readable when I use property.
string agency = base.GetAgencyDetails();
string agency = base.Agency; //I could write same logic in getter of the property.
Personally, I'd follow the MSDN Guidelines on this.
In general, methods represent actions and properties represent data. Properties are meant to be used like fields, meaning that properties should not be computationally complex or produce side effects. When it does not violate the following guidelines, consider using a property, rather than a method, because less experienced developers find properties easier to use.
It makes perfect sense if you think about it, a method would be more suited to something that would potentially alter data in some way, and a property is perfect for when you're retrieving some data and caching it.
If you're using an explicitly backed property, you could even combine the two in the case of a transform:
private ObjType _myObjWithStringification;
private string _stringRepOfData;
public string StringRepresentation
{
get {
if (_stringRepOfData == null) {
_stringRepOfData = _myObjWithStringification.ToString();
}
return _stringRepOfData;
}
}
Re: Your maintainability comment, I'm not sure it's very much valid. If you were to hit F12 to go to the declaration of the property you're using, you'll go straight to the getter anyway, just like you'd go to the method body if you used a method.
I'm not sure it's safe to assume that a property isn't going to have any custom retrieval logic.
If you have to write a lot of logic, then method, not property.
If you do a method call in the logic, then again method, not property.
Ref from enter link description here
In general, methods represent actions and properties represent data. Properties are meant to be used like fields, meaning that properties should not be computationally complex or produce side effects. When it does not violate the following guidelines, consider using a property, rather than a method, because less experienced developers find properties easier to use.
A property is simply a set of wrapper method (get/set) around a backing field.
The prefered way is to use a property so your external contract doesn't change, however you could later add additional logic or validations to the property methods.
Also makes the code cleaner as a bonus.
At their core properties are meant to be a wrapper over field access and provide unification between normal and calculated fields. Any operation which is akin to a field access should be represented as a property when possible.
That's not an absolute rule, it's a guideline. It's hard to draw up definitive rules for what should be a property over a method. However the reverse is not true; it is very clear when a method should be preferred over a property.
The operation has a visible side effect on the type. For example if it visibly mutates any state in the object the operation should never be a property.
Long running operations including expensive operations should never be properties
I am kinda not getting my head around this and was wondering if someone could please help me understand this.
So here is the problem, I have a class in which there are no required parameters. If user does not set the fields I can take the default value and carry on. Previously, I designed the same class as Joshua Bloch's Builder Pattern (Effective Java) (immutable object). I didn't had any good reason for making the class immutable except for the fact that I didn't wanted to have telescopic constructors and I didn't wanted to expose the data of the class.
But now, a fellow programmer friend is trying to convince me that it's okay to expose the data from the class using C# properties. I am not sure about this and I still feel that I should not be allowing user to muck with data.
Maybe I am completely wrong in my understanding. Could someone please clear my doubt about this, that whether it's good or bad to expose the data from the class?
If it is good then in what case it is good? Or else if someone can please point me to the article/book that clarifies this I would really appreciate it.
Thanks!
Expose the data in the class if it is needed or of interest outside the class, and do not do so if it is not. Expose it read-only if it's only needed to be read outside, and expose it as a full read/write property if it should be able to be changed. Otherwise, keep it in a private field.
immutable classes are easier to reason about especially in a multi tasking application, but they usually pay in performance (because when you need to change the value of a field you need to build the whole class again with the new value).
So, you could be ok or (depending on what you're coding) even better off with properties but as usual there's no silver bullet.
Settable properties are also the only way to code objects for some specific frameworks or libraries (e.g. ORMs like NHibernate), because you can't control how the library/framework initializes the object.
About constructors, C# 4 has optional parameters, that could help you avoid a long chain of constructors and also communicate much more clearly the fact that the parameters are optional.
However I can't think of many cases where you would end up with classes with a long list of optional parameters. If you find that you're coding classes like that too often (especially with the builder pattern, which is very elegant looking on the consumers' side of the class but complicates the code for the class itself) you may be using the wrong design. Are you sure you are not asking your classes to have too many responsibilities?
It basically depend on what's the purpose of your Class in the application context (could you give us more details?).
Anyway reckon that you could make a property safe from external changes by declaring is setter as private:
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/bb384054.aspx
public string UserName { get; private set; }
It's "good" when the consumer of the class needs the data. You have two possibilities to offer properties.
if you only want to offer a property for information purpose, then choose a read only property like this:
public string MyInformation { get; private set; }
If you have the need to allow the consumer to change that property, then make the setter public like that:
public string MyChangeableInformation { get; set; }
But if the consumer has no need to get the information, then hide it in your class!
But now, a fellow programmer friend is trying to convince me that it's
okay to expose the data from the class using C# properties. I am not
sure about this and I still feel that I should not be allowing user to
muck with data.
As a rule of thumb, methods should represent actions whereas properties represent data. What your friend might have tried telling you is that you can expose the data of your class to outside world and still maintain full control on how other classes are accessing the data. In your case, as other have mentioned, you can use properties with private setters, such that the caller should not be able to modify the data.
If my domain object should contain string properties in 2 languages, should I create 2 separate properties or create a new type BiLingualString?
For example in plant classification application, the plant domain object can contain Plant.LatName and Plant.EngName.
The number of bi-lingual properties for the whole domain is not big, about 6-8, I need only to support two languages, information should be presented to UI in both languages at the same time. (so this is not locallization). The requirements will not change during development.
It may look like an easy question, but this decision will have impact on validation, persistance, object cloning and many other things.
Negative sides I can think of using new dualString type:
Validation: If i'm going to use DataAnattations, Enterprise Library validation block, Flued validation this will require more work, object graph validation is harder than simple property validation.
Persistance: iether NH or EF will require more work with complex properties.
OOP: more complex object initialization, I will have to initialize this new Type in constructor before I can use it.
Architecture: converting objects for passing them between layers is harder, auto mapping tools will require more hand work.
While reading your question I was thinking about why not localization all the time but when I read information should be presented to UI in both languages at the same time. I think it makes sense to use properties.
In this case I would go for a class with one string for each languages as you have mentioned BiLingualString
public class Names
{
public string EngName {get;set;}
public string LatName {get;set;}
}
Then I would use this class in my main Plant Class like this
public class Plant: Names
{
}
If you 100% sure that it will always be only Latin and English I would just stick with simplest solution - 2 string properties. It also more flexible in UI then having BiLingualString. And you won't have to deal with Complex types when persisting.
To help decide, I suggest considering how consistent this behavior will be at all layers. If you expose these as two separate properties on the business object, I would also expect to see it stored as two separate columns in a database record, for example, rather than two translations for the same property stored in a separate table. It does seem odd to store translations this way, but your justifications sound reasonable, and 6 properties is not un-managable. But be sure that you don't intend to add more languages in the future.
If you expect this system to by somewhat dynamic in that you may need to add another language at some point, it would seem to make more sense to me to implement this differently so that you don't have to alter the schema when a new language needs to be supported.
I guess the thing to balance is this: consider the likelihood of having to adjust the languages or properties to accommodate a new language against the advantage (simplicity) you gain by exposing these directly as separate properties rather than having to load translations as a separate level.
I'm new to the .NET world having come from C++ and I'm trying to better understand properties. I noticed in the .NET framework Microsoft uses properties all over the place. Is there an advantage for using properties rather than creating get/set methods? Is there a general guideline (as well as naming convention) for when one should use properties?
It is pure syntactic sugar. On the back end, it is compiled into plain get and set methods.
Use it because of convention, and that it looks nicer.
Some guidelines are that when it has a high risk of throwing Exceptions or going wrong, don't use properties but explicit getters/setters. But generally even then they are used.
Properties are get/set methods; simply, it formalises them into a single concept (for read and write), allowing (for example) metadata against the property, rather than individual members. For example:
[XmlAttribute("foo")]
public string Name {get;set;}
This is a get/set pair of methods, but the additional metadata applies to both. It also, IMO, simply makes it easier to use:
someObj.Name = "Fred"; // clearly a "set"
DateTime dob = someObj.DateOfBirth; // clearly a "get"
We haven't duplicated the fact that we're doing a get/set.
Another nice thing is that it allows simple two-way data-binding against the property ("Name" above), without relying on any magic patterns (except those guaranteed by the compiler).
There is an entire book dedicated to answering these sorts of questions: Framework Design Guidelines from Addison-Wesley. See section 5.1.3 for advice on when to choose a property vs a method.
Much of the content of this book is available on MSDN as well, but I find it handy to have it on my desk.
Consider reading Choosing Between Properties and Methods. It has a lot of information on .NET design guidelines.
properties are get/set methods
Properties are set and get methods as people around here have explained, but the idea of having them is making those methods the only ones playing with the private values (for instance, to handle validations).
The whole other logic should be done against the properties, but it's always easier mentally to work with something you can handle as a value on the left and right side of operations (properties) and not having to even think it is a method.
I personally think that's the main idea behind properties.
I always think that properties are the nouns of a class, where as methods are the verbs...
First of all, the naming convention is: use PascalCase for the property name, just like with methods. Also, properties should not contain very complex operations. These should be done kept in methods.
In OOP, you would describe an object as having attributes and functionality. You do that when designing a class. Consider designing a car. Examples for functionality could be the ability to move somewhere or activate the wipers. Within your class, these would be methods. An attribute would be the number of passengers within the car at a given moment. Without properties, you would have two ways to implement the attribute:
Make a variable public:
// class Car
public int passengerCount = 4;
// calling code
int count = myCar.passengerCount;
This has several problems. First of all, it is not really an attribute of the vehicle. You have to update the value from inside the Car class to have it represent the vehicles true state. Second, the variable is public and could also be written to.
The second variant is one widley used, e. g. in Java, where you do not have properties like in c#:
Use a method to encapsulate the value and maybe perform a few operations first.
// class Car
public int GetPassengerCount()
{
// perform some operation
int result = CountAllPassengers();
// return the result
return result;
}
// calling code
int count = myCar.GetPassengerCount();
This way you manage to get around the problems with a public variable. By asking for the number of passengers, you can be sure to get the most recent result since you recount before answering. Also, you cannot change the value since the method does not allow it. The problem is, though, that you actually wanted the amount of passengers to be an attribute, not a function of your car.
The second approach is not necessarily wrong, it just does not read quite right. That's why some languages include ways of making attributes look like variables, even though they work like methods behind the scenes. Actionscript for example also includes syntax to define methods that will be accessed in a variable-style from within the calling code.
Keep in mind that this also brings responsibility. The calling user will expect it to behave like an attribute, not a function. so if just asking a car how many passengers it has takes 20 seconds to load, then you probably should pack that in a real method, since the caller will expect functions to take longer than accessing an attribute.
EDIT:
I almost forgot to mention this: The ability to actually perform certain checks before letting a variable be set. By just using a public variable, you could basically write anything into it. The setter method or property give you a chance to check it before actually saving it.
Properties simply save you some time from writing the boilerplate that goes along with get/set methods.
That being said, a lot of .NET stuff handles properties differently- for example, a Grid will automatically display properties but won't display a function that does the equivalent.
This is handy, because you can make get/set methods for things that you don't want displayed, and properties for those you do want displayed.
The compiler actually emits get_MyProperty and set_MyProperty methods for each property you define.
Although it is not a hard and fast rule and, as others have pointed out, Properties are implemented as Get/Set pairs 'behind the scenes' - typically Properties surface encapsulated/protected state data whereas Methods (aka Procedures or Functions) do work and yield the result of that work.
As such Methods will take often arguments that they might merely consume but also may return in an altered state or may produce a new object or value as a result of the work done.
Generally speaking - if you need a way of controlling access to data or state then Properties allow the implementation that access in a defined, validatable and optimised way (allowing access restriction, range & error-checking, creation of backing-store on demand and a way of avoiding redundant setting calls).
In contrast, methods transform state and give rise to new values internally and externally without necessarily repeatable results.
Certainly if you find yourself writing procedural or transformative code in a property, you are probably really writing a method.
Also note that properties are available via reflection. While methods are, too, properties represent "something interesting" about the object. If you are trying to display a grid of properties of an object-- say, something like the Visual Studio form designer-- then you can use reflection to query the properties of a class, iterate through each property, and interrogate the object for its value.
Think of it this way, Properties encapsulate your fields (commoningly marked private) while at the same time provides your fellow developers to either set or get the field value. You can even perform routine validation in the property's set method should you desire.
Properties are not just syntactic sugar - they are important if you need to create object-relational mappings (Linq2Sql or Linq2Entities), because they behave just like variables while it is possible to hide the implementation details of the object-relational mapping (persistance). It is also possible to validate a value being assigned to it in the getter of the property and protect it against assigning unwanted values.
You can't do this with the same elegance with methods. I think it is best to demonstrate this with a practical example.
In one of his articles, Scott Gu creates classes which are mapped to the Northwind database using the "code first" approach. One short example taken from Scott's blog (with a little modification, the full article can be read at Scott Gu's blog here):
public class Product
{
[Key]
public int ProductID { get; set; }
public string ProductName { get; set; }
public Decimal? UnitPrice { get; set; }
public bool Discontinued { get; set; }
public virtual Category category { get; set; }
}
// class Category omitted in this example
public class Northwind : DbContext
{
public DbSet<Product> Products { get; set; }
public DbSet<Category> Categories { get; set; }
}
You can use entity sets Products, Categories and the related classes Product and Category just as if they were normal objects containing variables: You can read and write them and they behave just like normal variables. But you can also use them in Linq queries, persist them (store them in the database and retrieve them).
Note also how easy it is to use annotations (C# attributes) to define the primary key (in this example ProductID is the primary key for Product).
While the properties are used to define a representation of the data stored in the database, there are some methods defined in the entity set class which control the persistence: For example, the method Remove() marks a given entity as deleted, while Add() adds a given entity, SaveChanges() makes the changes permanent. You can consider the methods as actions (i.e. you control what you want to do with the data).
Finally I give you an example how naturally you can use those classes:
// instantiate the database as object
var nw = new NorthWind();
// select product
var product = nw.Products.Single(p => p.ProductName == "Chai");
// 1. modify the price
product.UnitPrice = 2.33M;
// 2. store a new category
var c = new Category();
c.Category = "Example category";
c.Description = "Show how to persist data";
nw.Categories.Add(c);
// Save changes (1. and 2.) to the Northwind database
nw.SaveChanges();