My application saves a class away using XmlSerializer, and then later when required, creates an instance by deserialising it again. I would like to use some property members of
No it is not OK to assume the properties will be set when the constructor runs. The opposite is true. The constructor is the very first piece of code which runs when an instance of an object is created. It's not possible for the properties to be set until after the constructor has started executing.
The XML deserialization process roughly looks like the following
A way to work around this is to use a factory method to do the deserialization and then run the logic which depends on the properties being set. For example
class MyClass {
...
public static MyClass Deserialize(string xmlContents) {
var local = ... // Do the XML deserialization
local.PostCreateLogic();
return local;
}
}
The constructor is the creation of your object. Your object need to be created before assign properties value. Then, the constructor will be called first.
I don't know any documentation for the sequence. But if your class isn't so big, it's possible to add some breakpoint and you'll see which events is first.