In .NET, Why Can I Access Private Members of a Class Instance within the Class?
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by AMissico
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Published on 2010-04-10T23:38:40Z
Indexed on
2010/04/15
1:33 UTC
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.NET
|class-design
While cleaning some code today written by someone else, I changed the access modifier from Public
to Private
on a class variable/member/field. I expected a long list of compiler errors that I use to "refactor/rework/review" the code that used this variable. Imagine my surprise when I didn't get any errors. After reviewing, it turns out that another instance of the Class can access the private members of another instance declared within the Class. Totally unexcepted.
Is this normal? I been coding in .NET since the beginning and never ran into this issue, nor read about it. I may have stumbled onto it before, but only "vaguely noticed" and move on. Can anyone explain this behavoir to me? I would like to know the "why" I can do this. Please explain, don't just tell me the rule. Am I doing something wrong? I found this behavior in both C# and VB.NET. The code seems to take advantage of the ability to access private variables.
Sincerely,
- Totally Confused
Class Jack
Private _int As Integer
End Class
Class Foo
Public Property Value() As Integer
Get
Return _int
End Get
Set(ByVal value As Integer)
_int = value * 2
End Set
End Property
Private _int As Integer
Private _foo As Foo
Private _jack As Jack
Private _fred As Fred
Public Sub SetPrivate()
_foo = New Foo
_foo.Value = 4 'what you would expect to do because _int is private
_foo._int = 3 'TOTALLY UNEXPECTED
_jack = New Jack
'_jack._int = 3 'expected compile error
_fred = New Fred
'_fred._int = 3 'expected compile error
End Sub
Private Class Fred
Private _int As Integer
End Class
End Class
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