Is the order of static class initialization in C# deterministic?

Jess picture Jess · Sep 10, 2010 · Viewed 12.6k times · Source

I've done some searching and I think the following code is guaranteed to produce output:

B.X = 7

B.X = 0

A.X = 1

A = 1, B = 0
static class B
{
    public static int X = 7;
    static B() {
        Console.WriteLine("B.X = " + X);
        X = A.X;
        Console.WriteLine("B.X = " + X);
    }
}

static class A
{
    public static int X = B.X + 1;
    static A() {
        Console.WriteLine("A.X = " + X);
    }
}

static class Program
{
    static void Main() {
        Console.WriteLine("A = {0}, B = {1}", A.X, B.X);
    }
}

I've run this numerous times and always get the output above the code section; I just wanted to verify will it change? Even if textually, class A and class B are re-arranged?

Is it guaranteed that the first use of a static object will trigger the initialization of its static members, followed by instantiating its static constructor? For this program, using A.X in main will trigger the initialization of A.X, which in turn initializes B.X, then B() and after finishing the initialization of A.X, will proceed to A(). Finally, Main() will output A.X and B.X`.

Answer

porges picture porges · Sep 10, 2010

Straight from ECMA-334:

17.4.5.1: "If a static constructor (§17.11) exists in the class, execution of the static field initializers occurs immediately prior to executing that static constructor. Otherwise, the static field initializers are executed at an implementation-dependent time prior to the first use of a static field of that class."

And:

17.11: The execution of a static constructor is triggered by the first of the following events to occur within an application domain:

  • An instance of the class is created.
  • Any of the static members of the class are referenced.

If a class contains the Main method (§10.1) in which execution begins, the static constructor for that class executes before the Main method is called. If a class contains any static fields with initializers, those initializers are executed in textual order immediately prior to executing the static constructor (§17.4.5).

So the order is:

  • A.X used, so static A() called.
  • A.X needs to be initialized, but it uses B.X, so static B() called.
  • B.X needs to be initialized, and it is initialized to 7. B.X = 7
  • All static fields of B are initialized, so static B() is called. X is printed ("7"), then it is set to A.X. A has already started being initialized, so we get the value of A.X, which is the default value ("when a class is initialized, all static fields in that class are first initialized to their default value"); B.X = 0, and is printed ("0").
  • Done initializing B, and the value of A.X is set to B.X+1. A.X = 1.
  • All static fields of A are initialized, so static A() is called. A.X is printed ("1").
  • Back in Main, the values of A.X and B.X are printed ("1", "0").

It actually comments upon this in the standard:

17.4.5: It is possible for static fields with variable initializers to be observed in their default value state. However, this is strongly discouraged as a matter of style.