I'm trying to create an abstract class that defines a property with a getter. I want to leave it up to derived classes to decide if they want to implement a setter for the property or not. Is this possible?
What I have so far:
public abstract class AbstractClass {
public abstract string Value { get; }
public void DoSomething() {
Console.WriteLine(Value);
}
}
public class ConcreteClass1 : AbstractClass {
public override string Value { get; set; }
}
public class ConcreteClass2 : AbstractClass {
private string _value;
public override string Value {
get { return _value; }
}
public string Value {
set { _value = value; }
}
}
public class ConcreteClass3 : AbstractClass {
private string _value;
public override string Value {
get { return _value; }
}
public void set_Value(string value) {
_value = value;
}
}
In ConcreteClass1
, I get an error on the set
. It can't override set_Value
because no overridable set accessor exists in AbstractClass.
In ConcreteClass2
, I get an error on both Value
's because a member with the same name is already declared.
ConcreteClass3
doesn't give an error, but even though Value's set accessor would be compiled into set_Value, it doesn't work the other way around. Defining a set_Value
does not mean that Value
gets a set accessor. So I can't assign a value to a ConcreteClass3.Value property. I can use ConcreteClass3.set_Value("value"), but that's not what I'm trying to achieve here.
Is it possible to have the abstract class demand a public getter, while allowing an optional setter to be defined in a derived class?
In case you'r wondering, this is just a theoretical question. I don't have a real situation where something like this is needed. But I can imagine an abstract class that doesn't care how a property gets set, but that does need to be able to get the property.
Unfortunately, you can't do exactly what you want. You can do this with interfaces though:
public interface IInterface {
string MyProperty { get; }
}
public class Class : IInterface {
public string MyProperty { get; set; }
}
The way I would do it is to have a separate SetProperty method in the concrete classes:
public abstract class AbstractClass {
public abstract string Value { get; }
}
public class ConcreteClass : AbstractClass {
private string m_Value;
public override string Value {
get { return m_Value; }
}
public void SetValue(string value) {
m_Value = value;
}
}