What is the use of a shared variable in VB.NET?

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一整个雨季
一整个雨季 2020-11-29 09:44

What is the use of a Shared variable in VB.NET?

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  •  予麋鹿
    予麋鹿 (楼主)
    2020-11-29 10:25

    The "Shared" keyword in VB.NET is the equivalent of the "static" keyword in C#.

    In VB.NET, the Shared keyword can be applied to Dim, Event, Function, Operator, Property, and Sub statements within a class; however, in C#, the static keyword can be applied both to these statements within a normal class, and also at the class level to make the entire class static.

    A "Shared" or "static" method acts upon the "type" (that is, the class) rather than acting upon an instance of the type/class. Since Shared methods (or variables) act upon the type rather than an instance, there can only ever be one "copy" of the variable or method as opposed to many copies (one for each instance) in the case of non-shared (i.e., instance) methods or variables.

    For example: If you have a class, let's call it MyClass with a single non-shared method called MyMethod.

    Public Class MyClass
        Public Sub MyMethod()
            ' Do something in the method
        End Sub
    End Class
    

    In order to call that method you would need an instance of the class in order to call the method. Something like:

    Dim myvar As MyClass = New MyClass()
    myvar.MyMethod()
    

    If this method was then made into a "shared" method (by adding the "Shared" qualifier on the method definition, you no longer need an instance of the class to call the method.

    Public Class MyClass
        Public Shared Sub MyMethod()
            ' Do something in the method
        End Sub
    End Class
    

    And then:

    MyClass.MyMethod()
    

    You can also see examples of this in the .NET framework itself. For example, the "string" type has many static/shared methods. I.e.

    ' Using an instance method (i.e. Non-shared) of the string type/class.
    Dim s As String = "hello"
    s.Replace("h", "j")
    
    ' Using a static/shared method of the string type/class.
    s = String.Concat(s, " there!");
    

    Here's a good article that explains it further:

    Shared Members and Instance Members in VB.NET

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