Twelve C# 11 Features

Twelve C# 11 Features

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6 min read

Required Members

C# 11 introduces a new required modifier to properties and fields to enforce constructors and callers to initialize those values. If you initialize the object with a missing required member, you will get a compilation error.

// Initializations with required properties - valid
var p1 = new Person { Name = "Oleg", Surname = "Kyrylchuk" };
Person p2 = new("Oleg", "Kyrylchuk");

// Initializations with missing required properties - compilation error
var p3 = new Person { Name = "Oleg" };
Person p4 = new();

public class Person
{
    public Guid Id { get; set; } = Guid.NewGuid();
    public required string Name { get; set; }
    public required string Surname { get; set; }
}

If you have several parametrized constructors, you should add the SetsRequiredMembers attribute on the constructor, which initializes all required members. It informs the compiler about the proper constructor.

public class Person
{
    public Person() { }

    [SetsRequiredMembers]
    public Person(string name, string surname)
    {
        Name = name;
        Surname = surname;
    }

    public Guid Id { get; set; } = Guid.NewGuid();
    public required string Name { get; set; }
    public required string Surname { get; set; }
}

Raw String Literals

C# 11 introduces raw string literals. It allows containing of arbitrary text without escaping.

The format is at least three double quotes """..""". If you have text containing three double quotes, you should use four double quotes to escape them.

Combining with string interpolation, the count of $ denotes how many consecutive braces start and end the interpolation. In the example below, I want to use interpolation in the JSON, which already contains single braces {}. It'll be conflicted with the string interpolation, so I use two $$ to denote that double braces {{}} start and end the interpolation.

string name = "Oleg", surname = "Kyrylchuk";

string jsonString = 
    $$"""
    {
        "Name": {{name}},
        "Surname": {{surname}}
    }
    """;

Console.WriteLine(jsonString);

UTF-8 String Literals

C# 11 introduces UTF-8 string literals. You can add the u8 suffix to a string literal to specify UTF-8 encoding. UTF-8 literals are stored as ReadOnlySpan<byte>. To get an array of bytes you need to use ReadOnlySpan<T>.ToArray() method.

// C# 10
byte[] array = Encoding.UTF8.GetBytes("Hello World");

// C# 11
ReadOnlySpan<byte> span = "Hello World"u8;
byte[] array = span.ToArray();

List Patterns

C# 11 introduces list patterns.

It extends pattern matching to match sequences of elements in an array or a list. You can use list patterns with any pattern, including constant, type, property, and relational patterns.

var numbers = new[] { 1, 2, 3, 4 };

// List and constant patterns
Console.WriteLine(numbers is [1, 2, 3, 4]); // True
Console.WriteLine(numbers is [1, 2, 4]);    // False

// List and discard patterns
Console.WriteLine(numbers is [_, 2, _, 4]); // True
Console.WriteLine(numbers is [.., 3, _]);   // True

// List and logical patterns
Console.WriteLine(numbers is [_, >= 2, _, _]); // True

Newlines in String Interpolation Expressions

C# 11 introduces newlines in string interpolation.

It allows any valid C# code between { }, including newlines, to improve readability.

It's helpful when using longer C# expressions in interpolation, like pattern-matching switch expressions or LINQ queries.

// switch expression in string interpolation
int month = 5;
string season = $"The season is {month switch
{
    1 or 2 or 12 => "winter",
    > 2 and < 6 => "spring",
    > 5 and < 9 => "summer",
    > 8 and < 12 => "autumn",
    _ => "unknown. Wrong month number",
}}.";

Console.WriteLine(season);
// The season is spring.

// LINQ query in string interpolation
int[] numbers = new int[] { 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 };
string message = $"The reversed even values of {nameof(numbers)} are {string.Join(", ", numbers.Where(n => n % 2 == 0)
                             .Reverse())}.";

Console.WriteLine(message);
// The reversed even values of numbers are 6, 4, 2.

Auto-default Structs

The C# 11 compiler automatically initializes any field or property not initialized by a constructor in the structs.

The code below doesn't compile in the previous versions of C#. The compiler sets the default values.

struct Person
{
    public Person(string name)
    {
        Name = name;
    }

    public string Name { get; set; }
    public int Age { get; set; }
}

Pattern Match Span<char> on a Constant String

Using pattern matching, you can test if the string has a specific constant value in C#.

C# 11 allows pattern matching a Span<char> and ReadOnlySpan<char> on a constant string.

ReadOnlySpan<char> str = "Oleg".AsSpan();

if (str is "Oleg")
{
    Console.WriteLine("Hey, Oleg");
}

Generic Attributes

In C#, if you want to pass the type to an attribute, you can use the typeof expression.

However, there is no way to constrain what types are allowed to be passed. C# 11 allows generic attributes.

class MyType { }

class GenericAttribute<T> : Attribute
    where T: MyType 
{
    private T _type;
}

[Generic<MyType>]
class MyClass { }

Extended nameof Scope

C# 11 extends the scope of nameof expressions.

You can specify the name of a method parameter in an attribute on the method or parameter declaration.

This feature can be used in adding attributes for code analysis.

public class MyAttr : Attribute
{
    private readonly string _paramName;
    public MyAttr(string paramName)
    {
        _paramName = paramName;
    }
}
public class MyClass
{
    [MyAttr(nameof(param))]
    public void Method(int param, [MyAttr(nameof(param))] int anotherParam)
    { }
}

An Unsigned Right-shift Operator

C# 11 introduces an unsigned right-shift operator >>>.

It shifts bits right without replicating the high-order bit on each shift.

int n = -32;
Console.WriteLine($"Before shift: bin = {Convert.ToString(n, 2),32}, dec = {n}");

int a = n >> 2;
Console.WriteLine($"After     >>: bin = {Convert.ToString(a, 2),32}, dec = {a}");

int b = n >>> 2;
Console.WriteLine($"After    >>>: bin = {Convert.ToString(b, 2),32}, dec = {b}");

// Output:
// Before shift: bin = 11111111111111111111111111100000, dec = -32
// After     >>: bin = 11111111111111111111111111111000, dec = -8
// After    >>>: bin =   111111111111111111111111111000, dec = 1073741816

Static Abstract Members in Interfaces

C# 11 introduces static abstract members in interfaces.

You can add static abstract members in interfaces to define interfaces that include overloadable operators, other static members, and static properties.

public interface IAdditionOperator<TSelf, TOther, TResult>
    where TSelf : IAdditionOperator<TSelf, TOther, TResult>
{
    static abstract TResult operator +(TSelf left, TOther right);
}

Generic Math

Static abstract members feature has been added to enable generic math support. More about it you can read in this blog post.

Point p1 = new() { X = 10, Y = 5 };
Point p2 = new() { X = 5, Y = 7 };

Point p3 = p1 + p2;
Point p4 = p1 - p2;
Console.WriteLine(p3);
Console.WriteLine(p4);

public record Point : 
    IAdditionOperators<Point, Point, Point>, 
    ISubtractionOperators<Point, Point, Point>
{
    public int X { get; set; }
    public int Y { get; set; }

    public static Point operator +(Point left, Point right)
    {
        return left with { X = left.X + right.X, Y = left.Y + right.Y };
    }

    public static Point operator -(Point left, Point right) 
    {
        return left with { X = left.X - right.X, Y = left.Y - right.Y };
    }

    public override string ToString() => $"X: {X}; Y: {Y}";
}

File scoped types

I know my post's title is "Twelve C# 11 Features". However, I want to present you the thirteenth feature. I've added it to my post after .NET 7 release.

C# 11 introduces a new access modifier file.

The visibility of created type is scoped to the source file in which it is declared.

This feature helps source generator authors avoid naming collisions.

file class Person
{
    public string FirstName { get; set; }
    public string LastName { get; set; }
}

Wrapping Up

All code samples you can find on my GitHub.

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