Section 10.7.4 of the C# specification states:
When a property is specified as an
automatically implemented property, a
hidden backing field is automatically
available for the property, and the
accessors are implemented to read from
and write to that backing field. The
following example:
public class Point {
public int X { get; set; } // automatically implemented
public int Y { get; set; } // automatically implemented
}
is equivalent to the following declaration:
public class Point {
private int x;
private int y;
public int X { get { return x; } set { x = value; } }
public int Y { get { return y; } set { y = value; } }
}
That's what we promise, and that's what you get. The point of auto properties is to do the most basic, simple, cheap thing; if you want to do something fancier then you should write a "real" property.