XmlArrayItemAttribute.Type Property
Definition
Important
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Gets or sets the type allowed in an array.
public:
property Type ^ Type { Type ^ get(); void set(Type ^ value); };
public Type Type { get; set; }
public Type? Type { get; set; }
member this.Type : Type with get, set
Public Property Type As Type
Property Value
A Type that is allowed in the array.
Examples
The following example serializes an array of objects. The field that returns the array is attributed with two XmlArrayItemAttribute instances. Each instance instructs the XmlSerializer to accept the specified Type in the array.
#using <System.Xml.dll>
#using <System.dll>
using namespace System;
using namespace System::IO;
using namespace System::Xml::Serialization;
public ref class Person
{
public:
String^ Name;
};
public ref class Manager: public Person
{
public:
int Rank;
};
public ref class Group
{
public:
/* The Type property instructs the XmlSerializer to accept both
the Person and Manager types in the array. */
[XmlArrayItem(Type=Manager::typeid),
XmlArrayItem(Type=Person::typeid)]
array<Person^>^Staff;
};
void SerializeOrder( String^ filename )
{
// Creates an XmlSerializer.
XmlSerializer^ xSer = gcnew XmlSerializer( Group::typeid );
// Creates the Group object, and two array items.
Group^ myGroup = gcnew Group;
Person^ p1 = gcnew Person;
p1->Name = "Jacki";
Manager^ p2 = gcnew Manager;
p2->Name = "Megan";
p2->Rank = 2;
array<Person^>^myStaff = {p1,p2};
myGroup->Staff = myStaff;
// Serializes the object, and closes the StreamWriter.
TextWriter^ writer = gcnew StreamWriter( filename );
xSer->Serialize( writer, myGroup );
}
int main()
{
SerializeOrder( "TypeEx.xml" );
}
using System;
using System.IO;
using System.Xml.Serialization;
public class Group
{
/* The Type property instructs the XmlSerializer to accept both
the Person and Manager types in the array. */
[XmlArrayItem(Type = typeof(Manager)),
XmlArrayItem(Type=typeof(Person))]
public Person[]Staff;
}
public class Person
{
public string Name;
}
public class Manager:Person
{
public int Rank;
}
public class Run
{
public static void Main()
{
Run test = new Run();
test.SerializeOrder("TypeEx.xml");
}
public void SerializeOrder(string filename)
{
// Creates an XmlSerializer.
XmlSerializer xSer =
new XmlSerializer(typeof(Group));
// Creates the Group object, and two array items.
Group myGroup = new Group();
Person p1 = new Person();
p1.Name = "Jacki";
Manager p2 = new Manager();
p2.Name = "Megan";
p2.Rank = 2;
Person [] myStaff = {p1,p2};
myGroup.Staff = myStaff;
// Serializes the object, and closes the StreamWriter.
TextWriter writer = new StreamWriter(filename);
xSer.Serialize(writer, myGroup);
}
}
Imports System.IO
Imports System.Xml.Serialization
Public Class Group
' The Type property instructs the XmlSerializer to accept both
' the Person and Manager types in the array.
<XmlArrayItem(Type := GetType(Manager)), _
XmlArrayItem(Type := GetType(Person))> _
Public Staff() As Person
End Class
Public Class Person
Public Name As String
End Class
Public Class Manager
Inherits Person
Public Rank As Integer
End Class
Public Class Run
Public Shared Sub Main()
Dim test As New Run()
test.SerializeOrder("TypeEx.xml")
End Sub
Public Sub SerializeOrder(filename As String)
' Creates an XmlSerializer.
Dim xSer As New XmlSerializer(GetType(Group))
' Creates the Group object, and two array items.
Dim myGroup As New Group()
Dim p1 As New Person()
p1.Name = "Jacki"
Dim p2 As New Manager()
p2.Name = "Megan"
p2.Rank = 2
Dim myStaff() As Person = {p1, p2}
myGroup.Staff = myStaff
' Serializes the object, and closes the StreamWriter.
Dim writer As New StreamWriter(filename)
xSer.Serialize(writer, myGroup)
End Sub
End Class
Remarks
Use the Type property to specify an overridden type for a public field or public read/write property value.
If a field or property returns an array of type Object, apply multiple instances of the XmlArrayItemAttribute to the field or property. For each instance, set the Type property to a type of object that can be inserted into the array.
If an array contains only primitive types, you do not need to apply the XmlArrayItemAttribute. By default, the XmlSerializer generates a series of elements, each with the same element name, for each value, but the type of each element is set to the XML Schema data type. For example, the following code:
' Visual Basic code
Public Class Arrays
Public XSDTypes ()As Object= New Object(){"one", 2, 3.0}
End Class
// C# code
public class MyArray{
// No XmlArrayItemAttribute is applied.
public object[] XSDTypes= new object[]{"one", 2, 3.2};
}
results in this XML:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<Arrays xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xmlns:xsd="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema">
<XSDTypes>
<Object xsi:type="xsd:string">one</Object>
<Object xsi:type="xsd:int">2</Object>
<Object xsi:type="xsd:double">3</Object>
</XSDTypes>
</Arrays>
However, if you specify the Type property for each primitive type, the element name for each value is generated using the .NET type name. For example this code:
' Visual Basic code
Public Class Arrays
<XmlArrayItem(GetType(String)), _
XmlArrayItem(GetType(Integer)), _
XmlArrayItem(GetType(Double))> _
Public PrimitiveTypes () As Object = New Object(){"one", 2, 3.0}
End Class
// C# code
public class Arrays{
[XmlArrayItem(typeof(string))]
[XmlArrayItem(typeof(int))]
[XmlArrayItem(typeof(double))]
public object [] PrimitiveTypes = new object[]{"one", 2, 3.0};
}
results in this XML:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<Arrays xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xmlns:xsd="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema">
<PrimitiveTypes>
<string>one</string>
<int>2</int>
<double>3</double>
</PrimitiveTypes>
</Arrays>