Walter Bright wrote:
The issue is what if b is a property, returns a temporary object, and that temp's .c field is uselessly set to 3?

It's a classic problem with properties that are implemented as functions.

I don't see how C#'s special property syntax adds any value for dealing with this.

One thought I had was to simply disallow the '.' to appear after a function style property.

.... unless it returns a ref.

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