readonly (C# Reference)
The readonly
keyword is a modifier that can be used in five contexts:
In a field declaration,
readonly
indicates that assignment to the field can only occur as part of the declaration or in a constructor in the same class. A readonly field can be assigned and reassigned multiple times within the field declaration and constructor.A
readonly
field can't be assigned after the constructor exits. This rule has different implications for value types and reference types:- Because value types directly contain their data, a field that is a
readonly
value type is immutable. - Because reference types contain a reference to their data, a field that is a
readonly
reference type must always refer to the same object. That object might not be immutable. Thereadonly
modifier prevents replacing the field value with a different instance of the reference type. However, the modifier doesn't prevent the instance data of the field from being modified through the read-only field.
Warning
An externally visible type that contains an externally visible read-only field that is a mutable reference type may be a security vulnerability and may trigger warning CA2104 : "Do not declare read only mutable reference types."
- Because value types directly contain their data, a field that is a
In a
readonly struct
type definition,readonly
indicates that the structure type is immutable. For more information, see thereadonly
struct section of the Structure types article.In an instance member declaration within a structure type,
readonly
indicates that an instance member doesn't modify the state of the structure. For more information, see thereadonly
instance members section of the Structure types article.In a
ref readonly
method return, thereadonly
modifier indicates that method returns a reference and writes aren't allowed to that reference.- To declare a
ref readonly
parameter to a method.
- To declare a
Readonly field example
In this example, the value of the field year
can't be changed in the method ChangeYear
, even though it was assigned a value in the class constructor:
class Age
{
private readonly int _year;
Age(int year)
{
_year = year;
}
void ChangeYear()
{
//_year = 1967; // Compile error if uncommented.
}
}
You can assign a value to a readonly
field only in the following contexts:
When the variable is initialized in the declaration, for example:
public readonly int y = 5;
In an instance constructor of the class that contains the instance field declaration.
In the static constructor of the class that contains the static field declaration.
These constructor contexts are also the only contexts in which it's valid to pass a readonly
field as an out or ref parameter.
Note
The readonly
keyword is different from the const keyword. A const
field can only be initialized at the declaration of the field. A readonly
field can be assigned multiple times in the field declaration and in any constructor. Therefore, readonly
fields can have different values depending on the constructor used. Also, while a const
field is a compile-time constant, the readonly
field can be used for run-time constants as in the following example:
public static readonly uint timeStamp = (uint)DateTime.Now.Ticks;
public class SamplePoint
{
public int x;
// Initialize a readonly field
public readonly int y = 25;
public readonly int z;
public SamplePoint()
{
// Initialize a readonly instance field
z = 24;
}
public SamplePoint(int p1, int p2, int p3)
{
x = p1;
y = p2;
z = p3;
}
public static void Main()
{
SamplePoint p1 = new SamplePoint(11, 21, 32); // OK
Console.WriteLine($"p1: x={p1.x}, y={p1.y}, z={p1.z}");
SamplePoint p2 = new SamplePoint();
p2.x = 55; // OK
Console.WriteLine($"p2: x={p2.x}, y={p2.y}, z={p2.z}");
}
/*
Output:
p1: x=11, y=21, z=32
p2: x=55, y=25, z=24
*/
}
In the preceding example, if you use a statement like the following example:
p2.y = 66; // Error
you get the compiler error message:
A readonly field cannot be assigned to (except in a constructor or a variable initializer)
Readonly instance members
You can also use the readonly
modifier to declare that an instance member doesn't modify the state of a struct.
public readonly double Sum()
{
return X + Y;
}
Note
In the case of a read/write property, you can add the readonly
modifier to the get
accessor. Some get
accessors may perform a calculation and cache the result, rather than simply returning the value of a private field. Adding the readonly
modifier to the get
accessor guarantees that the get
accessor doesn't modify the internal state of the object by caching any result.
You can find more examples in the readonly
instance members section of the Structure types article.
Ref readonly return example
The readonly
modifier on a ref return
indicates that the returned reference can't be modified. The following example returns a reference to the origin. It uses the readonly
modifier to indicate that callers can't modify the origin:
private static readonly SamplePoint s_origin = new SamplePoint(0, 0, 0);
public static ref readonly SamplePoint Origin => ref s_origin;
The type returned doesn't need to be a readonly struct
. Any type that can be returned by ref
can be returned by ref readonly
.
Readonly ref readonly return example
A ref readonly return
can also be used with readonly
instance members on struct
types:
public struct ReadonlyRefReadonlyExample
{
private int _data;
public readonly ref readonly int ReadonlyRefReadonly(ref int reference)
{
// _data = 1; // Compile error if uncommented.
return ref reference;
}
}
The method essentially returns a readonly
reference together with the instance member (in this case a method) being readonly
(not able to modify any instance fields).
C# language specification
For more information, see the C# Language Specification. The language specification is the definitive source for C# syntax and usage.
You can also see the language specification proposals: