Obsolete (C# Programming Guide)
The Obsolete attribute marks a program entity as one that is no longer recommended for use. Each use of an entity marked obsolete will subsequently generate a warning or an error, depending on how the attribute is configured. For example:
[System.Obsolete("use class B")]
class A
{
public void Method() { }
}
class B
{
[System.Obsolete("use NewMethod", true)]
public void OldMethod() { }
public void NewMethod() { }
}
In this example the Obsolete attribute is applied to class A and to method B.OldMethod. Because the second argument of the attribute constructor applied to B.OldMethod is set to true, this method will cause a compiler error, whereas using class A will just produce a warning. Calling B.NewMethod, however, produces no warning or error.
The string provided as the first argument to attribute constructor will be displayed as part of the warning or error. For example, when you use it with the previous definitions, the following code generates two warnings and one error:
// Generates 2 warnings:
A a = new A();
// Generate no errors or warnings:
B b = new B();
b.NewMethod();
// Generates an error, terminating compilation:
b.OldMethod();
Two warnings for class A are generated: one for the declaration of the class reference, and one for the class constructor.
The Obsolete attribute can be used without arguments, but including an explanation of why the item is obsolete and what to use instead is recommended.
The Obsolete attribute is a single-use attribute and can be applied to any entity that allows attributes. Obsolete is an alias for ObsoleteAttribute.
See Also
Concepts
Reference
Reflection (C# Programming Guide)
Attributes (C# Programming Guide)
Disambiguating Attribute Targets (C# Programming Guide)
Creating Custom Attributes (C# Programming Guide)