Nested object initializer syntax

Rawling picture Rawling · May 28, 2013 · Viewed 9.2k times · Source

Resharper has just suggested the following refactoring to me:

// Constructor initializes InitializedProperty but
// the UninitializedSubproperty is uninitialized.
var myInstance = new MyClass();
myInstance.InitializedProperty.UninitializedSubproperty = new MyOtherClass();

// becomes

var myInstance = new MyClass
    {
        InitializedProperty = { UninitializedSubproperty = new MyOtherClass() }
    };

I've never seen this kind of object initialization before. In particular I don't see how

InitializedProperty = { UninitializedSubproperty = new MyOtherClass() }

makes any sense - it's not assigning anything to InitializedProperty.

Is this behaviour specified anywhere?

Answer

Ilya Ivanov picture Ilya Ivanov · May 28, 2013

This syntax is called Object Initialization. C# specification clearly gives a lot of examples on this subject:

7.6.10.2 Object initializers

An object initializer consists of a sequence of member initializers, enclosed by { and } tokens and separated by commas. Each member initializer must name an accessible field or property of the object being initialized, followed by an equals sign and an expression or an object initializer or collection initializer. It is an error for an object initializer to include more than one member initializer for the same field or property. It is not possible for the object initializer to refer to the newly created object it is initializing.

Examples are:

Rectangle r = new Rectangle
            {
                P1 = { X = 0, Y = 1 },
                P2 = { X = 2, Y = 3 }
            };

Compiles down to:

Rectangle r = new Rectangle();
r.P1.X = 0;
r.P1.Y = 1;
r.P2.X = 2;
r.P2.Y = 3;

Having:

public class Rectangle
{
    public Rectangle()
    {
        P1 = new Point(); //default Point for demo purpose
        P2 = new Point(); //default Point for demo purpose
    }

    public Point P1 { get; set; }
    public Point P2 { get; set; }
}

and

public class Point
{
    public int X { get; set; }
    public int Y { get; set; }
}

Also consider reading a great chapter 8.3 Simplified initialization in C# in depth book. Jon Skeet provides another look at advantages of using this kind of syntax for initializing tree-like structures.