18

Given a static class with an initializer method:

public static class Foo
{
    // Class members...

    internal static init()
    {
        // Do some initialization...
    }
}

How can I ensure the initializer is run before Main()?

The best I can think of is to add this to Foo:

private class Initializer
{
    private static bool isDone = false;
    public Initializer()
    {
        if (!isDone)
        {
            init();
            isDone = true;
        }
    }
}

private static readonly Initializer initializer = new Initializer();

Will this work or are there some unforeseen caveats? And is there any better way of doing this?

Uwe Keim
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Matt
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4 Answers4

22

Simply do the initialization inside a static constructor for Foo.

From the documentation:

A static constructor is called automatically to initialize the class before the first instance is created or any static members are referenced.

John Cummings
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Jon
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12

There are static constructors in C# that you can use.

public static class Foo
{
    // Class members...

    static Foo(){
        init();
        // other stuff
    }

    internal static init()
    {
        // Do some initialization...
    }
}
John Cummings
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João Simões
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5

Move your code from an internal static method to a static constructor, like this:

public static class Foo
{
  // Class members...

  static Foo()
  {
    // Do some initialization...
  }
}

This way, you are quite sure that the static constructor will be run on first mention of your Foo class, whether it's a construction of an instance or access to a static member.

Pang
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SWeko
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1

Place your initialization code in the static constructor of the class

static Foo()
{
    // Initialization code
}

This constructor is run the first time the class is accessed.

You can use RunClassConstructor to trigger the static constructor of the class before using a class. This can be useful if, for instance, this class registers itself in a IOC container or something like this.

RuntimeHelpers.RunClassConstructor(typeof(Foo).TypeHandle);

You find the RuntimeHelpers in the System.Runtime.CompilerServices namespace.

Olivier Jacot-Descombes
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