Structs are similar to classes in that they represent data structures that can contain data members and function members. However, unlike classes, structs are value types and do not require heap allocation. A variable of a struct type directly contains the data of the struct, whereas a variable of a class type contains a reference to the data, the latter known as an object.
Structs are particularly useful for small data structures that have value semantics. Complex numbers, points in a coordinate system, or key-value pairs in a dictionary are all good examples of structs. Key to these data structures is that they have few data members, that they do not require use of inheritance or referential identity, and that they can be conveniently implemented using value semantics where assignment copies the value instead of the reference.
As described in Simple types, the simple types provided by C#, such as int
, double
, and bool
, are in fact all struct types. Just as these predefined types are structs, it is also possible to use structs and operator overloading to implement new "primitive" types in the C# language. Two examples of such types are given at the end of this chapter (Struct examples).
A struct_declaration is a type_declaration (Type declarations) that declares a new struct:
struct_declaration
: attributes? struct_modifier* 'partial'? 'struct' identifier type_parameter_list?
struct_interfaces? type_parameter_constraints_clause* struct_body ';'?
;
A struct_declaration consists of an optional set of attributes (Attributes), followed by an optional set of struct_modifiers (Struct modifiers), followed by an optional partial
modifier, followed by the keyword struct
and an identifier that names the struct, followed by an optional type_parameter_list specification (Type parameters), followed by an optional struct_interfaces specification (Partial modifier) ), followed by an optional type_parameter_constraints_clauses specification (Type parameter constraints), followed by a struct_body (Struct body), optionally followed by a semicolon.
A struct_declaration may optionally include a sequence of struct modifiers:
struct_modifier
: 'new'
| 'public'
| 'protected'
| 'internal'
| 'private'
| struct_modifier_unsafe
;
It is a compile-time error for the same modifier to appear multiple times in a struct declaration.
The modifiers of a struct declaration have the same meaning as those of a class declaration (Class declarations).
The partial
modifier indicates that this struct_declaration is a partial type declaration. Multiple partial struct declarations with the same name within an enclosing namespace or type declaration combine to form one struct declaration, following the rules specified in Partial types.
A struct declaration may include a struct_interfaces specification, in which case the struct is said to directly implement the given interface types.
struct_interfaces
: ':' interface_type_list
;
Interface implementations are discussed further in Interface implementations.
The struct_body of a struct defines the members of the struct.
struct_body
: '{' struct_member_declaration* '}'
;
The members of a struct consist of the members introduced by its struct_member_declarations and the members inherited from the type System.ValueType
.
struct_member_declaration
: constant_declaration
| field_declaration
| method_declaration
| property_declaration
| event_declaration
| indexer_declaration
| operator_declaration
| constructor_declaration
| static_constructor_declaration
| type_declaration
| struct_member_declaration_unsafe
;
Except for the differences noted in Class and struct differences, the descriptions of class members provided in Class members through Iterators apply to struct members as well.
Structs differ from classes in several important ways:
- Structs are value types (Value semantics).
- All struct types implicitly inherit from the class
System.ValueType
(Inheritance). - Assignment to a variable of a struct type creates a copy of the value being assigned (Assignment).
- The default value of a struct is the value produced by setting all value type fields to their default value and all reference type fields to
null
(Default values). - Boxing and unboxing operations are used to convert between a struct type and
object
(Boxing and unboxing). - The meaning of
this
is different for structs (This access). - Instance field declarations for a struct are not permitted to include variable initializers (Field initializers).
- A struct is not permitted to declare a parameterless instance constructor (Constructors).
- A struct is not permitted to declare a destructor (Destructors).
Structs are value types (Value types) and are said to have value semantics. Classes, on the other hand, are reference types (Reference types) and are said to have reference semantics.
A variable of a struct type directly contains the data of the struct, whereas a variable of a class type contains a reference to the data, the latter known as an object. When a struct B
contains an instance field of type A
and A
is a struct type, it is a compile-time error for A
to depend on B
or a type constructed from B
. A struct X
directly depends on a struct Y
if X
contains an instance field of type Y
. Given this definition, the complete set of structs upon which a struct depends is the transitive closure of the directly depends on relationship. For example
struct Node
{
int data;
Node next; // error, Node directly depends on itself
}
is an error because Node
contains an instance field of its own type. Another example
struct A { B b; }
struct B { C c; }
struct C { A a; }
is an error because each of the types A
, B
, and C
depend on each other.
With classes, it is possible for two variables to reference the same object, and thus possible for operations on one variable to affect the object referenced by the other variable. With structs, the variables each have their own copy of the data (except in the case of ref
and out
parameter variables), and it is not possible for operations on one to affect the other. Furthermore, because structs are not reference types, it is not possible for values of a struct type to be null
.
Given the declaration
struct Point
{
public int x, y;
public Point(int x, int y) {
this.x = x;
this.y = y;
}
}
the code fragment
Point a = new Point(10, 10);
Point b = a;
a.x = 100;
System.Console.WriteLine(b.x);
outputs the value 10
. The assignment of a
to b
creates a copy of the value, and b
is thus unaffected by the assignment to a.x
. Had Point
instead been declared as a class, the output would be 100
because a
and b
would reference the same object.
All struct types implicitly inherit from the class System.ValueType
, which, in turn, inherits from class object
. A struct declaration may specify a list of implemented interfaces, but it is not possible for a struct declaration to specify a base class.
Struct types are never abstract and are always implicitly sealed. The abstract
and sealed
modifiers are therefore not permitted in a struct declaration.
Since inheritance isn't supported for structs, the declared accessibility of a struct member cannot be protected
or protected internal
.
Function members in a struct cannot be abstract
or virtual
, and the override
modifier is allowed only to override methods inherited from System.ValueType
.
Assignment to a variable of a struct type creates a copy of the value being assigned. This differs from assignment to a variable of a class type, which copies the reference but not the object identified by the reference.
Similar to an assignment, when a struct is passed as a value parameter or returned as the result of a function member, a copy of the struct is created. A struct may be passed by reference to a function member using a ref
or out
parameter.
When a property or indexer of a struct is the target of an assignment, the instance expression associated with the property or indexer access must be classified as a variable. If the instance expression is classified as a value, a compile-time error occurs. This is described in further detail in Simple assignment.
As described in Default values, several kinds of variables are automatically initialized to their default value when they are created. For variables of class types and other reference types, this default value is null
. However, since structs are value types that cannot be null
, the default value of a struct is the value produced by setting all value type fields to their default value and all reference type fields to null
.
Referring to the Point
struct declared above, the example
Point[] a = new Point[100];
initializes each Point
in the array to the value produced by setting the x
and y
fields to zero.
The default value of a struct corresponds to the value returned by the default constructor of the struct (Default constructors). Unlike a class, a struct is not permitted to declare a parameterless instance constructor. Instead, every struct implicitly has a parameterless instance constructor which always returns the value that results from setting all value type fields to their default value and all reference type fields to null
.
Structs should be designed to consider the default initialization state a valid state. In the example
using System;
struct KeyValuePair
{
string key;
string value;
public KeyValuePair(string key, string value) {
if (key == null || value == null) throw new ArgumentException();
this.key = key;
this.value = value;
}
}
the user-defined instance constructor protects against null values only where it is explicitly called. In cases where a KeyValuePair
variable is subject to default value initialization, the key
and value
fields will be null, and the struct must be prepared to handle this state.
A value of a class type can be converted to type object
or to an interface type that is implemented by the class simply by treating the reference as another type at compile-time. Likewise, a value of type object
or a value of an interface type can be converted back to a class type without changing the reference (but of course a run-time type check is required in this case).
Since structs are not reference types, these operations are implemented differently for struct types. When a value of a struct type is converted to type object
or to an interface type that is implemented by the struct, a boxing operation takes place. Likewise, when a value of type object
or a value of an interface type is converted back to a struct type, an unboxing operation takes place. A key difference from the same operations on class types is that boxing and unboxing copies the struct value either into or out of the boxed instance. Thus, following a boxing or unboxing operation, changes made to the unboxed struct are not reflected in the boxed struct.
When a struct type overrides a virtual method inherited from System.Object
(such as Equals
, GetHashCode
, or ToString
), invocation of the virtual method through an instance of the struct type does not cause boxing to occur. This is true even when the struct is used as a type parameter and the invocation occurs through an instance of the type parameter type. For example:
using System;
struct Counter
{
int value;
public override string ToString() {
value++;
return value.ToString();
}
}
class Program
{
static void Test<T>() where T: new() {
T x = new T();
Console.WriteLine(x.ToString());
Console.WriteLine(x.ToString());
Console.WriteLine(x.ToString());
}
static void Main() {
Test<Counter>();
}
}
The output of the program is:
1
2
3
Although it is bad style for ToString
to have side effects, the example demonstrates that no boxing occurred for the three invocations of x.ToString()
.
Similarly, boxing never implicitly occurs when accessing a member on a constrained type parameter. For example, suppose an interface ICounter
contains a method Increment
which can be used to modify a value. If ICounter
is used as a constraint, the implementation of the Increment
method is called with a reference to the variable that Increment
was called on, never a boxed copy.
using System;
interface ICounter
{
void Increment();
}
struct Counter: ICounter
{
int value;
public override string ToString() {
return value.ToString();
}
void ICounter.Increment() {
value++;
}
}
class Program
{
static void Test<T>() where T: ICounter, new() {
T x = new T();
Console.WriteLine(x);
x.Increment(); // Modify x
Console.WriteLine(x);
((ICounter)x).Increment(); // Modify boxed copy of x
Console.WriteLine(x);
}
static void Main() {
Test<Counter>();
}
}
The first call to Increment
modifies the value in the variable x
. This is not equivalent to the second call to Increment
, which modifies the value in a boxed copy of x
. Thus, the output of the program is:
0
1
1
For further details on boxing and unboxing, see Boxing and unboxing.
Within an instance constructor or instance function member of a class, this
is classified as a value. Thus, while this
can be used to refer to the instance for which the function member was invoked, it is not possible to assign to this
in a function member of a class.
Within an instance constructor of a struct, this
corresponds to an out
parameter of the struct type, and within an instance function member of a struct, this
corresponds to a ref
parameter of the struct type. In both cases, this
is classified as a variable, and it is possible to modify the entire struct for which the function member was invoked by assigning to this
or by passing this as a ref
or out
parameter.
As described in Default values, the default value of a struct consists of the value that results from setting all value type fields to their default value and all reference type fields to null
. For this reason, a struct does not permit instance field declarations to include variable initializers. This restriction applies only to instance fields. Static fields of a struct are permitted to include variable initializers.
The example
struct Point
{
public int x = 1; // Error, initializer not permitted
public int y = 1; // Error, initializer not permitted
}
is in error because the instance field declarations include variable initializers.
Unlike a class, a struct is not permitted to declare a parameterless instance constructor. Instead, every struct implicitly has a parameterless instance constructor which always returns the value that results from setting all value type fields to their default value and all reference type fields to null (Default constructors). A struct can declare instance constructors having parameters. For example
struct Point
{
int x, y;
public Point(int x, int y) {
this.x = x;
this.y = y;
}
}
Given the above declaration, the statements
Point p1 = new Point();
Point p2 = new Point(0, 0);
both create a Point
with x
and y
initialized to zero.
A struct instance constructor is not permitted to include a constructor initializer of the form base(...)
.
If the struct instance constructor doesn't specify a constructor initializer, the this
variable corresponds to an out
parameter of the struct type, and similar to an out
parameter, this
must be definitely assigned (Definite assignment) at every location where the constructor returns. If the struct instance constructor specifies a constructor initializer, the this
variable corresponds to a ref
parameter of the struct type, and similar to a ref
parameter, this
is considered definitely assigned on entry to the constructor body. Consider the instance constructor implementation below:
struct Point
{
int x, y;
public int X {
set { x = value; }
}
public int Y {
set { y = value; }
}
public Point(int x, int y) {
X = x; // error, this is not yet definitely assigned
Y = y; // error, this is not yet definitely assigned
}
}
No instance member function (including the set accessors for the properties X
and Y
) can be called until all fields of the struct being constructed have been definitely assigned. The only exception involves automatically implemented properties (Automatically implemented properties). The definite assignment rules (Simple assignment expressions) specifically exempt assignment to an auto-property of a struct type within an instance constructor of that struct type: such an assignment is considered a definite assignment of the hidden backing field of the auto-property. Thus, the following is allowed:
struct Point
{
public int X { get; set; }
public int Y { get; set; }
public Point(int x, int y) {
X = x; // allowed, definitely assigns backing field
Y = y; // allowed, definitely assigns backing field
}
A struct is not permitted to declare a destructor.
Static constructors for structs follow most of the same rules as for classes. The execution of a static constructor for a struct type is triggered by the first of the following events to occur within an application domain:
- A static member of the struct type is referenced.
- An explicitly declared constructor of the struct type is called.
The creation of default values (Default values) of struct types does not trigger the static constructor. (An example of this is the initial value of elements in an array.)
The following shows two significant examples of using struct
types to create types that can be used similarly to the predefined types of the language, but with modified semantics.
The DBInt
struct below implements an integer type that can represent the complete set of values of the int
type, plus an additional state that indicates an unknown value. A type with these characteristics is commonly used in databases.
using System;
public struct DBInt
{
// The Null member represents an unknown DBInt value.
public static readonly DBInt Null = new DBInt();
// When the defined field is true, this DBInt represents a known value
// which is stored in the value field. When the defined field is false,
// this DBInt represents an unknown value, and the value field is 0.
int value;
bool defined;
// Private instance constructor. Creates a DBInt with a known value.
DBInt(int value) {
this.value = value;
this.defined = true;
}
// The IsNull property is true if this DBInt represents an unknown value.
public bool IsNull { get { return !defined; } }
// The Value property is the known value of this DBInt, or 0 if this
// DBInt represents an unknown value.
public int Value { get { return value; } }
// Implicit conversion from int to DBInt.
public static implicit operator DBInt(int x) {
return new DBInt(x);
}
// Explicit conversion from DBInt to int. Throws an exception if the
// given DBInt represents an unknown value.
public static explicit operator int(DBInt x) {
if (!x.defined) throw new InvalidOperationException();
return x.value;
}
public static DBInt operator +(DBInt x) {
return x;
}
public static DBInt operator -(DBInt x) {
return x.defined ? -x.value : Null;
}
public static DBInt operator +(DBInt x, DBInt y) {
return x.defined && y.defined? x.value + y.value: Null;
}
public static DBInt operator -(DBInt x, DBInt y) {
return x.defined && y.defined? x.value - y.value: Null;
}
public static DBInt operator *(DBInt x, DBInt y) {
return x.defined && y.defined? x.value * y.value: Null;
}
public static DBInt operator /(DBInt x, DBInt y) {
return x.defined && y.defined? x.value / y.value: Null;
}
public static DBInt operator %(DBInt x, DBInt y) {
return x.defined && y.defined? x.value % y.value: Null;
}
public static DBBool operator ==(DBInt x, DBInt y) {
return x.defined && y.defined? x.value == y.value: DBBool.Null;
}
public static DBBool operator !=(DBInt x, DBInt y) {
return x.defined && y.defined? x.value != y.value: DBBool.Null;
}
public static DBBool operator >(DBInt x, DBInt y) {
return x.defined && y.defined? x.value > y.value: DBBool.Null;
}
public static DBBool operator <(DBInt x, DBInt y) {
return x.defined && y.defined? x.value < y.value: DBBool.Null;
}
public static DBBool operator >=(DBInt x, DBInt y) {
return x.defined && y.defined? x.value >= y.value: DBBool.Null;
}
public static DBBool operator <=(DBInt x, DBInt y) {
return x.defined && y.defined? x.value <= y.value: DBBool.Null;
}
public override bool Equals(object obj) {
if (!(obj is DBInt)) return false;
DBInt x = (DBInt)obj;
return value == x.value && defined == x.defined;
}
public override int GetHashCode() {
return value;
}
public override string ToString() {
return defined? value.ToString(): "DBInt.Null";
}
}
The DBBool
struct below implements a three-valued logical type. The possible values of this type are DBBool.True
, DBBool.False
, and DBBool.Null
, where the Null
member indicates an unknown value. Such three-valued logical types are commonly used in databases.
using System;
public struct DBBool
{
// The three possible DBBool values.
public static readonly DBBool Null = new DBBool(0);
public static readonly DBBool False = new DBBool(-1);
public static readonly DBBool True = new DBBool(1);
// Private field that stores -1, 0, 1 for False, Null, True.
sbyte value;
// Private instance constructor. The value parameter must be -1, 0, or 1.
DBBool(int value) {
this.value = (sbyte)value;
}
// Properties to examine the value of a DBBool. Return true if this
// DBBool has the given value, false otherwise.
public bool IsNull { get { return value == 0; } }
public bool IsFalse { get { return value < 0; } }
public bool IsTrue { get { return value > 0; } }
// Implicit conversion from bool to DBBool. Maps true to DBBool.True and
// false to DBBool.False.
public static implicit operator DBBool(bool x) {
return x? True: False;
}
// Explicit conversion from DBBool to bool. Throws an exception if the
// given DBBool is Null, otherwise returns true or false.
public static explicit operator bool(DBBool x) {
if (x.value == 0) throw new InvalidOperationException();
return x.value > 0;
}
// Equality operator. Returns Null if either operand is Null, otherwise
// returns True or False.
public static DBBool operator ==(DBBool x, DBBool y) {
if (x.value == 0 || y.value == 0) return Null;
return x.value == y.value? True: False;
}
// Inequality operator. Returns Null if either operand is Null, otherwise
// returns True or False.
public static DBBool operator !=(DBBool x, DBBool y) {
if (x.value == 0 || y.value == 0) return Null;
return x.value != y.value? True: False;
}
// Logical negation operator. Returns True if the operand is False, Null
// if the operand is Null, or False if the operand is True.
public static DBBool operator !(DBBool x) {
return new DBBool(-x.value);
}
// Logical AND operator. Returns False if either operand is False,
// otherwise Null if either operand is Null, otherwise True.
public static DBBool operator &(DBBool x, DBBool y) {
return new DBBool(x.value < y.value? x.value: y.value);
}
// Logical OR operator. Returns True if either operand is True, otherwise
// Null if either operand is Null, otherwise False.
public static DBBool operator |(DBBool x, DBBool y) {
return new DBBool(x.value > y.value? x.value: y.value);
}
// Definitely true operator. Returns true if the operand is True, false
// otherwise.
public static bool operator true(DBBool x) {
return x.value > 0;
}
// Definitely false operator. Returns true if the operand is False, false
// otherwise.
public static bool operator false(DBBool x) {
return x.value < 0;
}
public override bool Equals(object obj) {
if (!(obj is DBBool)) return false;
return value == ((DBBool)obj).value;
}
public override int GetHashCode() {
return value;
}
public override string ToString() {
if (value > 0) return "DBBool.True";
if (value < 0) return "DBBool.False";
return "DBBool.Null";
}
}