Question

I came to know that C# 3.0 comes with a new feature of Auto-Implemented Properties,I liked it as we don't have to declare extra private varible in this (compare to earlier property), earlier I was using a Property i.e.

private bool isPopup = true;
public bool IsPopup
{
    get
    {
      return isPopup;
    }
    set
    {
      isPopup = value;
    }
}

Now I've converted it into Auto-Implemented property i.e.

public bool IsPopup
{
    get; set;
}

I want to set the default value of this property to true without using it not even in page_init method, I tried but not succeeded, Can anyone explain how to do this?

Was it helpful?

Solution

You can initialize the property in the default constructor:

public MyClass()
{
   IsPopup = true;
}

With C# 6.0 it is possible to initialize the property at the declaration like normal member fields:

public bool IsPopup { get; set; } = true;  // property initializer

It is now even possible to create a real read-only automatic property which you can either initialize directly or in the constructor, but not set in other methods of the class.

public bool IsPopup { get; } = true;  // read-only property with initializer

OTHER TIPS

Attributes specified for an auto property do not apply to the backing field, so an attribute for a default value won't work for this type of property.

You can, however, initialize an auto property:

VB.NET

Property FirstName As String = "James"
Property PartNo As Integer = 44302
Property Orders As New List(Of Order)(500)

C# 6.0 and above

public string FirstName { get; set; } = "James";
public int PartNo { get; set; } = 44302;
public List<Order> Orders { get; set; } = new List<Order>(500);

C# 5.0 and below

Unfortunately, C# versions below 6.0 do not support this, so you have to initialize the default values for auto properties in the constructor.

Have you tried DefaultValueAttribute

using System.ComponentModel;

[DefaultValue(true)]
public bool IsPopup
{
    get
    {
      return isPopup;
    }
    set
    {
      isPopup = value;
    }
}

You can use default property value like below

One advantage of this method is you don't need to check null values for Boolean types

using System.ComponentModel; 

public class ClassName
 {
   [DefaultValue(true)]
   public bool IsPopup{ get; set; }
 }
Licensed under: CC-BY-SA with attribution
Not affiliated with StackOverflow
scroll top