if i do that, calling bar as a property like this:

var value = myObject.bar;

leads to 'value' being an instance of IronRuby.BuiltIns.RubyMethod, and not
the value that is in the @bar instance field

which

i'm using 1.1 btw, not sure how this would behave on 1.0

from looking at the IronRuby source code, it looks like i need to find a way
to change the RubyMemberInfo for a given accessor method to
RubyAttributeReaderInfo or RubyAttributeWriterInfo

On Tue, Sep 7, 2010 at 11:01 AM, Ivan Porto Carerro <i...@flanders.co.nz>wrote:

> You can just define them as attr_accessors and then implement the methods
>
> class Foo
>
>   attr_accessor :bar, :baz
>
>   def bar=(val)
>     # do more stuff here for example
>     @bar = val
>   end
>
>   def bar
>     @bar
>   end
>
> end
>
> On Tue, Sep 7, 2010 at 10:36 AM, Davy Brion <ral...@davybrion.com> wrote:
>
>> Hi all,
>>
>> IronRuby has a nice trick where attributes defined by attr_reader,
>> attr_accessor and attr_writer are usable as properties from C#... i was just
>> wondering: is it possible to use the same trick in our own ruby code?
>>
>> or can anyone just point me in the right direction as to where in the
>> IronRuby source code i could find where this is being done?
>>
>> I have accessor methods that really need to do something specific and
>> ideally, i'd like them be usable as properties in .NET since it leads to a
>> much nicer syntax in C#
>>
>> brs,
>> Davy
>>
>> _______________________________________________
>> Ironruby-core mailing list
>> Ironruby-core@rubyforge.org
>> http://rubyforge.org/mailman/listinfo/ironruby-core
>>
>>
>
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>
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