in a c++ class declaration, you can label a group of members as private or public, e.g.
private:
int x;
double y;
seems like there's no way to do this in c#. am I wrong?
From stackoverflow
-
No you're not wrong. If you don't write any modifiers it will be assumed as private.
Michael Meadows : I believe that members without a visibility modifier will be implicitly made internal, not private.Mohammadreza : Internal is default for classes and structures and for their members private is default. -
No, you can't not do this in C#.
At best, you can use the default visibility for members, which is private, and not use private, but for public, you have to indicate it for all members.
-
You're correct. Although, if you leave visibility keyword off altogether, a member defaults to private.
0 comments:
Post a Comment