For the getters and setters (the things that use them are called Properties) it's just a convenient and nice-looking way to make people think they're using a variable, but to do some computation whenever the variable is updated or accessed. For instance:
BankAccount.Interest
looks better than
BankAccount.GetInterest()
Even though you can calculate the interest at the time it is requested in both cases.
They are also used to make a variable be able to be accessed from outside the class, but changeable only from within the class with this technique:
public double Interest {
get;
private set;
}
For an example of a setter being used, if you've ever used Windows Forms and updated a control's Height or Width property, you're using a setter. While it looks like you're using a normal instance variable like c.Height = 400, you're really letting c update it's position by redrawing at a new place. So setters notify you exactly when a variable is changed, so your class can update other things base on the new value.
Yet another application of Properties is that you can check the value people try to set the property to. For instance, if you want to maintain an interest rate for each bank account but you don't want to allow negative numbers or numbers over 50, you just use a setter:
private int _interestRate = someDefault;
public int InterestRate {
get { return _interestRate; }
set {
if (value < 0 || value > 50)
throw new SomeException(); // or just don't update _interestRate
_interestRate = value;
}
}
This way people can't set public values to invalid values.
For your second question, you can do one of two things depending on what you're trying to do.
One: You can make that member static. That means that just one of them exists for the entire class instead of one per instance of the class. Then you can access it by ClassName.MemberName.
You can do that this way:
// inside the BaseCharacter class definition:
public static SomeStruct[] Attributes = new SomeStruct[size];
// then to use it somewhere else in your code, do something with
BaseCharacter.Attributes[index]
Two: You have to make an instance of the class and access the array through that. This means that each object will have its own seperate array.
You'd do that like this:
BaseCharacter bc = new BaseCharacter();
// use bc.Attributes
The second one is probably what you'll want to do, since you probably will want to modify each character's attributes seperately from all the other characters.