An instance constructor is a member that implements the actions required to initialize an instance of a class. Instance constructors are declared using constructor-declarations: constructor-declaration : attributesconstructor-modifiersconstructor-declaratorconstructor-bodyconstructor-modifiers : constructor-modifierconstructor-modifiersconstructor-modifierconstructor-modifier : publicprotectedinternalprivateexternconstructor-declarator : identifier(formal-parameter-list)constructor-initializerconstructor-initializer : :base(argument-list):this(argument-list)constructor-body : block; A constructor-declaration may include a set of attributes (24), a valid combination of the four access modifiers (17.2.3), and an extern (17.5.7) modifier. A constructor declaration is not permitted to include the same modifier multiple times. The identifier of a constructor-declarator must name the class in which the instance constructor is declared. If any other name is specified, a compile-time error occurs. The optional formal-parameter-list of an instance constructor is subject to the same rules as the formal-parameter-list of a method (17.5). The formal parameter list defines the signature (10.6) of an instance constructor and governs the process whereby overload resolution (14.4.2) selects a particular instance constructor in an invocation. Each of the types referenced in the formal-parameter-list of an instance constructor must be at least as accessible as the constructor itself (10.5.4). The optional constructor-initializer specifies another instance constructor to invoke before executing the statements given in the constructor-body of this instance constructor. This is described further in 17.10.1. When a constructor declaration includes an extern modifier, the constructor is said to be an external constructor. Because an external constructor declaration provides no actual implementation, its constructor-body consists of a semicolon. For all other constructors, the constructor-body consists of a block, which specifies the statements to initialize a new instance of the class. This corresponds exactly to the block of an instance method with a void return type (17.5.8). Instance constructors are not inherited. Thus, a class has no instance constructors other than those actually declared in the class. If a class contains no instance constructor declarations, a default instance constructor is automatically provided (17.10.4). Instance constructors are invoked by object-creation-expressions (14.5.10.1) and through constructor-initializers.