Thread-safe Singleton Pattern in C#

The Singleton pattern is used when you need one, and only one instance of your class. Sometimes you see this pattern used in cases where the construction of a class is expensive (like a file stream). It can be lazy loaded (at runtime instead of compiletime) and must be thread-safe. The class gets a public method or property named Instance, responsible for creating the Singleton. The constructor of the Singleton class is private, so no one can construct a new instance from the class by applying ‘new’.

using System;

namespace Singleton
{
    class Program
    {
        static void Main(string[] args)
        {
            // Lazy loaded object
            // Singleton gets created on first call
            Singleton.Instance.SomeProperty = 0;
            Singleton.Instance.SomeMethod();
        }
    }

    public class Singleton
    {
        // Private constructor to prevent 'new'
        private Singleton()
        {
        }

        // The instance read only property
        public static Singleton Instance
        {
            get
            {
                return Nested.instance;
            }
        }

        // Nested class with the actual Singleton object
        private class Nested
        {
            internal static readonly Singleton instance =
                new Singleton();

            static Nested()
            {
            }
        }

        // Additional methods and propeties
        public int SomeProperty { get; set; }
        public void SomeMethod() { }
    }
}

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