>>>>The age old questions. Should I use a property or a method? Is one faster than the other?
>>>
>>>Einar,
>>>I just looked this up in book Framework Design Guidelines (ISBN-10:0-321-24675-6). This is focused more on resuable frameworks instead of general code, but I think a lot of the ideas still apply:
>>>
>>>Use a property, rather than a method, if the value of the property is stored in the process memory and the property would just provide access to the value. (I think we can all agree on this)
>>>
>>>Use a method, rather than a property, in the following situations:
>>>-The operation is orders of magnitude slower than a field access would be.
>>>-The operation is a conversion, such as Object.ToString method. (Note that DateTime.Now property does not adhere to this guideline, and should)
>>>-The operation returns a different result each time it is called, even if the parameters don't change (like Guid.NewGuid).
>>>-The operation has a significant and observable side effect.
>>>-The operation returns a copy of an internal state.
>>>-The operation returns an array.
>>
>>Thanks for the link Mike. It looks like a good book. I can't seem to find the 2nd edition though.
>
>That's because it hasn't been released yet. It is being released November 3rd. You can pre-order it on Amazon.
That explains that. Could you post the link from Amazon?
Semper ubi sub ubi.