Tutorials C# Programming Tutorial
Source Generators — Complete Guide
Source Generators — Complete Guide: free step-by-step lesson with examples, common mistakes, and interview tips — part of C# Programming Tutorial on Toolliyo Academy.
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C# Programming Tutorial · Lesson 201 of 240
Source Generators
Beginner ✓ → Intermediate ✓ → Advanced ✓ → Professional
Professional · 4 — Architecture & jobs · ~28 min read · Module 15: Advanced C# Features
1. Introduction
Professional lesson: Source Generators. You will see how large .NET systems are structured. Build understanding one concept at a time — do not rush the architecture modules. Source Generators is a core part of C# and .NET development. In plain terms: it helps you use modern C# features for cleaner, faster production code. You will see Source Generators in console apps, Web APIs, background workers, and unit tests. Skipping it makes later modules (OOP, async, collections) much harder.
Advanced features solve specific problems — adopt when you hit the problem, not before.
2. Real-world story
At Hospital patient record API, engineers use Source Generators to use modern C# features for cleaner, faster production code. This code shows the same pattern you will see in code reviews — simplified for learning, but structurally similar to production services deployed to Azure or on-prem IIS/Kestrel.
3. Problem without this concept
If you ignore Source Generators, this is what teams struggle with:
- Duplicate logic and unclear structure
- Harder onboarding for new developers
- More bugs found only in production
4. Definition
Source Generators is a core part of C# and .NET development. In plain terms: it helps you use modern C# features for cleaner, faster production code.
5. Why do we need it?
You will see Source Generators in console apps, Web APIs, background workers, and unit tests. Skipping it makes later modules (OOP, async, collections) much harder. When profiling shows allocation hotspots or you need cutting-edge C# features.
6. Where is it used?
- High-performance parsers
- Custom serializers
- AOT deployments
- Span
reduces allocations in high-performance parsers. - Source generators compile validation code at build time.
7. How it works
- Read the example top to bottom.
- Each line connects to Source Generators.
- Run it with dotnet run, then change one value and predict the output before you save.
8. Syntax
Core syntax pattern for Source Generators:
Span<int> slice = stackalloc int[4] { 10, 20, 30, 40 };
ReadOnlySpan<char> code = "INV-2025".AsSpan(0, 3);
Console.WriteLine($"{code.ToString()} total items: {slice.Length}");
| Syntax | Meaning |
|---|---|
// Source Generators | Comment — notes for humans; compiler ignores it. |
Span<int> slice = stackalloc int[4] { 10, 20, 30, 40 }; | Part of the Source Generators example — read with surrounding lines. |
ReadOnlySpan<char> code = "INV-2025".AsSpan(0, 3); | Part of the Source Generators example — read with surrounding lines. |
Console.WriteLine($"{code.ToString()} total items: {slice.Length}"); | Prints output to the terminal — useful while learning. |
9. Beginner example
Copy into a console project (dotnet new console → dotnet run).
// Source Generators
Span<int> slice = stackalloc int[4] { 10, 20, 30, 40 };
ReadOnlySpan<char> code = "INV-2025".AsSpan(0, 3);
Console.WriteLine($"{code.ToString()} total items: {slice.Length}");
Line-by-line
| Code | What it means |
|---|---|
// Source Generators | Comment — notes for humans; compiler ignores it. |
Span<int> slice = stackalloc int[4] { 10, 20, 30, 40 }; | Part of the Source Generators example — read with surrounding lines. |
ReadOnlySpan<char> code = "INV-2025".AsSpan(0, 3); | Part of the Source Generators example — read with surrounding lines. |
Console.WriteLine($"{code.ToString()} total items: {slice.Length}"); | Prints output to the terminal — useful while learning. |
10. Real project example
At Hospital patient record API, engineers use Source Generators to use modern C# features for cleaner, faster production code. This code shows the same pattern you will see in code reviews — simplified for learning, but structurally similar to production services deployed to Azure or on-prem IIS/Kestrel.
Production-style C#
// Hospital patient record API
// Uses Source Generators to use modern C# features for cleaner, faster production code
// Source Generators
Span<int> slice = stackalloc int[4] { 10, 20, 30, 40 };
ReadOnlySpan<char> code = "INV-2025".AsSpan(0, 3);
Console.WriteLine($"{code.ToString()} total items: {slice.Length}");
Why teams use this: Teams that master Source Generators ship fewer production incidents and pass code review faster on Hospital-scale systems.
11. Visual understanding
Input (user, file, API)
│
▼
Source Generators logic in C#
│
▼
Output (console, HTTP response, file)
12. Internal working
- Roslyn compiler checks syntax and types before your program runs.
- CLR executes IL and provides services (GC, exceptions, threading).
- For this lesson, focus on behavior first — runtime details matter more as apps grow.
13. Advantages
- Readable code that new team members can follow
- Compiler catches many mistakes before deploy
- Huge .NET job market in India and worldwide
14. Disadvantages
- Takes time to learn if you skip fundamentals
- Overusing advanced features too early adds complexity
15. Best practices
- Use meaningful names — `transferAmount` not `x`
- Run `dotnet format` or EditorConfig for consistent style
- Commit small examples to Git from lesson one
16. Common mistakes
- Copy-pasting without typing — your fingers need to remember Source Generators syntax.
- Skipping error messages when the compiler fails — the red text usually tells you exactly what to fix.
17. Interview questions
What is Source Generators in simple words?
Source Generators is explained above — focus on the "what" paragraph and the lesson example.
Do I need Source Generators for ASP.NET Core jobs?
Yes for most backend roles — this course builds toward Web APIs and services using the same C# fundamentals.
Explain Source Generators to a non-technical teammate in 30 seconds.
Focus on the problem it solves — use a bank transfer or shopping cart analogy, not jargon.
Junior interview: give one code example using Source Generators.
Use the beginner example from this lesson — be able to write it on a whiteboard without looking.
What goes wrong if you misuse Source Generators?
Mention one mistake from the Common mistakes section and how you would fix it in a code review.
Do this on your computer
- Open Visual Studio or run dotnet new console -n LearnSourceGenera.
- Paste the lesson example into Program.cs (or a new file).
- Run the program and confirm the output matches your expectation.
- Read the real-world section and name which part of a banking or e-commerce API would use this topic.
- Change one line (amount, loop bound, or method name) and run again.
- Read the real-world section and identify which layer (API, service, domain) uses this topic.
- Run dotnet build and dotnet run locally — confirm output.
- Change one value and predict the result before saving.
Experiments — try changing this
- Change a number or string in the example and run again — predict output first.
- Introduce a deliberate error (remove a semicolon) and read the compiler message.
- Open dotnet docs for Source Generators and compare one keyword with the lesson example.
18. Summary
- Source Generators is used to use modern C# features for cleaner, faster production code.
- Practice by editing the example yourself.
- Move to the next lesson when you can explain this topic in your own words.
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