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From: Loïc Joly (loic.joly_at_[hidden])
Date: 2006-09-20 13:31:41


David Abrahams a écrit :
> Edward Diener <eldiener_at_[hidden]> writes:
>
>
>>Most .Net objects aren't half-baked objects to use, but they are objects
>>which are created with a default constructor, which gives people the
>>idea that they are not ready to use. They rely quite a bit on properties
>>being set in order to use, and those properties are set via the
>>design-time interface in Visual Studio, which then injects code in the
>>default constructor to set the properties. So while it looks like these
>>objects are not ready to use, they really are.
>
>
> Edward, I know little of .Net, so I'd appreciate it if you could help
> me out here. When you say "design-time interface," what are you
> talking about? Some kind of GUI?

I think so.

> Are you saying that this GUI
> modifies the compiled binary, leaving no textual trace of member
> initialization values in the original source for the class?

The GUI modifies the source code.

-- 
Loïc

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