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QuestionPlease See this Pin
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Questionc# Pin
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AnswerRe: c# Pin
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OriginalGriff7-Mar-12 2:52
mveOriginalGriff7-Mar-12 2:52 
This has a big smell of homework about it, so I won't give you code!

Create a class (called Product) which has public properties Id, Description and Count
The first two properties may not require a public set method, just a get so you should make these private or protected, but the final one will require both as public. You could use a backing field, or allow it to be automatic.
It would be a good idea to provide a constructor which takes three parameters and sets the appropriate properties.

You can then create an array of the class which has sufficient elements or (preferably) a List which meaans that you do not have to worry about the number of elements at any point.

To declare an array of any class:
C#
MyClass[] myArrayOfClass = new MyClass[2000];

To declare it as a List:
C#
List<MyClass> myListOfClass = new List<MyClass>();

Neither of these allocate any actual instances of the class itself - just the structures that will store them.
In both cases, you will have to allocate each instance with the new keyword, and add it into the appropriate structure.
Ideological Purity is no substitute for being able to stick your thumb down a pipe to stop the water

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