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Home/ Questions/Q 6041485
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 23, 20262026-05-23T06:40:06+00:00 2026-05-23T06:40:06+00:00

I have a lightly used dictionary which is hardly ever going to be read

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I have a lightly used dictionary which is hardly ever going to be read or updated since the individual items raise events and return their results with their event args. In fact the thread is always going to be updated with the same thread. I was thinking about adding a simple lock just to be safe. I was wondering if I can just place the lock in the get accessor. Does this work?

        Dictionary<string,Indicator> indicators = new Dictionary<string,Indicator>();
        Dictionary<string, Indicator> Indicators
        {
            get
            {
                lock (indicators)
                {
                    return indicators;
                }
            }
        }

        public void AddIndicator(Indicator i)
        {
            lock (indicators)
            {
                indicators.Add(i.Name, i);
            }
        }
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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-23T06:40:07+00:00Added an answer on May 23, 2026 at 6:40 am

    That doesn’t do anything particularly useful, no.

    In particular, if you have:

    x = foo.Indicators["blah"]
    

    then the indexer will be executed without the thread holding the lock… so it’s not thread-safe. Think of the above code like this:

    Dictionary<string, Indicator> indicators = foo.Indicators;
    // By now, your property getter has completed, and the lock has been released...
    x = indicators["blah"];
    

    Do you ever need to do anything with the collection other than access it via the indexer? If not, you might want to just replace the property with a method:

    public Indicator GetIndicator(string name)
    {
        lock (indicators)
        {
            return indicators[name];
        }
    }
    

    (You may want to use TryGetValue instead, etc – it depends on what you’re trying to achieve.)

    Personally I’d prefer to use a reference to a privately-owned-and-otherwise-unused lock object rather than locking on the collection reference, but that’s a separate matter.

    As mentioned elsewhere, ConcurrentDictionary is your friend if you’re using .NET 4, but of course it’s not available prior to that 🙁

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