Accessing a Private Constructor from Outside the Class in C#

AndrewJacksonZA picture AndrewJacksonZA · Nov 12, 2010 · Viewed 21.8k times · Source

If I define a class with a private default constructor and a public constructor that has parameters, how can I access the private constructor?

public class Bob
{
   public String Surname { get; set; }

   private Bob()
   { }

   public Bob(string surname)
   {
      Surname = surname;
   }
}

I can access the private constructor via a static method on the class like this:

public static Bob GetBob()
{
   return new Bob();
}

I thought that I could access the private constructor via an extension method, since (according to my understanding) extension methods are translated so that they appear to be static methods on the class, but I can't:

static class Fred
{
   public static Bob Bobby(this Bob bob)
   {
      return new Bob();
   }
}

So, how can I access the private constructor?

Thank you


EDIT:

The reason that I wanted to do this was that I wanted to create tests for one of our business classes, but not allow a consumer of this class to be able to instantiate an object incorrectly. I'm testing it, so I know (I hope!) under what circumstances the tests will fail. I'm still a testing n00b right now so my idea may or may not have been the "wrong way" of doing things.

I've changed my testing strategy to just do things the way the a consumer of this class would, i.e. calling the public methods and if the public methods are OK, assuming that the private methods are OK. I would still prefer to test the private methods, but my boss is breathing down my neck on a deliverable :-(

Answer

jgauffin picture jgauffin · Nov 12, 2010

New answer (nine years later)

There is now several overloads for Activator.CreateInstance that allow you to use non public constructors:

Activator.CreateInstance(typeof(YourClass), true);

true = use non public constructors.

.

Old answer

Default constructors are private for a reason. The developer doesn't make it private for fun.

But if you still want to use the default constructor you get it by using reflection.

var constructor = typeof(Bob).GetConstructor(BindingFlags.NonPublic|BindingFlags.Instance, null, new Type[0], null);
var instance = (Bob)constructor.Invoke(null);

Edit

I saw your comment about testing. Never test protected or private methods / properties. You have probably done something wrong if you can't manage to test those methods/properties through the public API. Either remove them or refactor the class.

Edit 2

Forgot a binding flag.