Specifically, in relation to field initializers (in this case, static) - §17.11 in ECMA 334:
If a class contains any static fields with initializers, those initializers are executed in textual order immediately prior to executing the static constructor.
Now, if we have multiple partial
classes in separate files, is that order determined anywhere? My gut says "not formally defined, but probably relates to the order included in the csproj, or the order noted to csc". Is this correct?
(and yes, I realise it would be better to avoid the ambiguity completely - probably by moving all the initialization to a static constructor).
For example, if I have a.cs
:
using System;
partial class Program
{
private static int Foo = Write("Foo");
static int Write(string name)
{
Console.WriteLine(name);
return 0;
}
static void Main()
{
Console.WriteLine("[press any key]");
Console.ReadLine();
}
}
and b.cs
:
partial class Program
{
private static int Bar = Write("Bar");
}
and:
<Compile Include="a.cs" />
<Compile Include="b.cs" />
then this is Foo
then Bar
; if, however, this is:
<Compile Include="b.cs" />
<Compile Include="a.cs" />
then it is Bar
then Foo
. This supports the observation, but does not state it strongly. §8.7.13 (Partial type declarations) makes no comment on the order when combining partial
classes. So; is there anything stronger we can say here, either from the C# language spec or from the tooling documentation?
Additionally, it behaves similarly with csc a.cs b.cs
vs csc b.cs a.cs
.
question from:
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/7965830/is-the-textual-order-across-partial-classes-formally-defined 与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…