質問

A R# inspection of my solution told me "'Local variable 'fs' is never used'" about this line:

var fs = new FormatString();

Okay, then; just get rid of the whole shebang, right?

Instead, R#'s action was to remove just the var declaration and assignment, leaving:

new FormatString();

To my chaprise (chagrined surprise), it compiles!

But does it make any kind of sense?

役に立ちましたか?

解決

Theoretically, yes. An object is constructed; the constructor executes. It might well do something "interesting" in the process.

他のヒント

If there are side effects in the constructor, then it's important for it to run. If it is side effect free, then you can remove the whole thing.

public FormatString()
{
    LaunchTheNukes();
}

in this case, yes it's doing 'something'.

ライセンス: CC-BY-SA帰属
所属していません StackOverflow
scroll top