ReSharper suggests changing the accessibility of a public constructor in an abstract class to protected, but it does not state the rationale behind this.
Can you shed some light?
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Simply because being public makes no sense in an abstract class. An abstract class by definition cannot be instantiated directly. It can only be instantiated by an instance of a derived type. Therefore the only types that should have access to a constructor are its derived types and hence protected makes much more sense than public. It more accurately describes the accessibility.