8:45 AM
@Hypersapien what you are looking for is "the lack of static" and "discipline"
static basically means that fields/properties are shared between every instance
private means that you cant access it from anywhere else in your application
but other instances can still access the value from your instance when that code is inside your class
and there is no reason to make anything more private
for example, the equals function should be able to access those values
and you, as developer, are in control of what is written in that class/file, so you can decide if you want to access the properties of other instances
> struct Property<T, P> where P : IValidator<T>, new ()
this line can be split up in two parts
this basically defines a struct named "Property"
it also has 2 generic types "T" and "P"
generics are basically a form of composition of types
for example, you can make a List implementation, for example LinkedList, but you dont want to make that implementation for every type that you can imagine, so you make a generic type parameter so you can compose the type at the call site
LinkedList<String>, LinkedList<Int32>, LinkedList<XDocument>, etc will all be that same class
just with a different api
the same counts for that struct
perhaps, it has a property of type "P"
the "where" part is a constraint on the generic types
> where P : IValidator<T>, new ()