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Home/ Questions/Q 350127
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 12, 20262026-05-12T11:31:20+00:00 2026-05-12T11:31:20+00:00

This is probably a matter of personal preference, but when do you use properties

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This is probably a matter of personal preference, but when do you use properties instead of functions in your code

For instance to get an error log I could say

string GetErrorLog()
{
      return m_ErrorLog;
}

or I could

string ErrorLog
{
     get { return m_ErrorLog; }
}

How do you decide which one to use? I seem to be inconsistent in my usage and I’m looking for a good general rule of thumb. Thanks.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-12T11:31:20+00:00Added an answer on May 12, 2026 at 11:31 am

    I tend to use properties if the following are true:

    • The property will return a single, logic value
    • Little or no logic is involved (typically just return a value, or do a small check/return value)

    I tend to use methods if the following are true:

    • There is going to be significant work involved in returning the value – ie: it’ll get fetched from a DB, or something that may take “time”
    • There is quite a bit of logic involved, either in getting or setting the value

    In addition, I’d recommend looking at Microsoft’s Design Guidelines for Property Usage. They suggest:

    Use a property when the member is a logical data member.

    Use a method when:

    • The operation is a conversion, such as Object.ToString.
    • The operation is expensive enough that you want to communicate to the user that they should consider caching the result.
    • Obtaining a property value using the get accessor would have an observable side effect.
    • Calling the member twice in succession produces different results.
    • The order of execution is important. Note that a type’s properties should be able to be set and retrieved in any order.
    • The member is static but returns a value that can be changed.
    • The member returns an array. Properties that return arrays can be very misleading. Usually it is necessary to return a copy of the internal array so that the user cannot change internal state. This, coupled with the fact that a user can easily assume it is an indexed property, leads to inefficient code. In the following code example, each call to the Methods property creates a copy of the array. As a result, 2n+1 copies of the array will be created in the following loop.
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