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Home/ Questions/Q 8607567
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 12, 20262026-06-12T03:23:21+00:00 2026-06-12T03:23:21+00:00

I’ve made an application that supports plugins. At the moment, the plugin’s base class

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I’ve made an application that supports plugins. At the moment, the plugin’s base class implements an abstract class and supplies it with the name of the plugin (stuff omitted):

public class AppExecutePlugin : APlugin
{
    public AppExecutePlugin() : base("Application Execute")
    {

    }
    ... (other stuff here)
}

Now, I am thinking of naming plugins using custom attributes as so (don’t care about syntactical errors):

[PluginName("Application Execute")]
public class AppExecutePlugin : APlugin
{
    public AppExecutePlugin()
    {

    }
}

Since I rarely use attributes for my own apps, I would like to know whether the second approach will lead to more abstract implementation or in general if it has pros comparing to my first approach.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-12T03:23:23+00:00Added an answer on June 12, 2026 at 3:23 am

    It will not lead to more abstract implementation (as it is hard to evaluate how this affects ‘abstractness’), but it has a few benefits:

    • you don’t need to instantiate plugins in order to read metadata – you can just read the attribute info using reflection
    • plugin instances don’t need to add state (i.e. members) just for the sake of having metadata
    • you can easily add additional attributes, or extend this one, without polluting the plugin interface

    E.g. my plugins look like this:

    [Plugin("FriendlyName", Description = "..", Version = "1.0")]
    [RequiresLicense("LicKey.XYZ")]
    class MyPlugin : PluginBase {...}
    

    Without attributes, I would need to add all of this info to base class constructor. Of course, you could always avoid it by having a method in your plugin interface like this:

    public static PluginInfo GetPluginInfo()
    {
       return new PluginInfo() { Name = "FriendlyName",
                                 Description = "..", 
                                 Version = "1.0",
                                 License = "lickey.XYZ" };
    }
    

    You could execute it using reflection without instantiating the plugins, thus achieving the same as with attributes. I prefer attributes to this approach, as it feels a bit more declarative, but that might easily be just personal taste.

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