XmlSerializationWriter.WriteNullableQualifiedNameEncoded Method
Definition
Important
Some information relates to prerelease product that may be substantially modified before it’s released. Microsoft makes no warranties, express or implied, with respect to the information provided here.
Writes an XML element whose body contains a valid XML qualified name. XmlWriter inserts an xsi:nil='true'
attribute if the string's value is null
.
This API supports the product infrastructure and is not intended to be used directly from your code.
protected:
void WriteNullableQualifiedNameEncoded(System::String ^ name, System::String ^ ns, System::Xml::XmlQualifiedName ^ value, System::Xml::XmlQualifiedName ^ xsiType);
protected void WriteNullableQualifiedNameEncoded (string name, string? ns, System.Xml.XmlQualifiedName? value, System.Xml.XmlQualifiedName? xsiType);
protected void WriteNullableQualifiedNameEncoded (string name, string ns, System.Xml.XmlQualifiedName value, System.Xml.XmlQualifiedName xsiType);
member this.WriteNullableQualifiedNameEncoded : string * string * System.Xml.XmlQualifiedName * System.Xml.XmlQualifiedName -> unit
Protected Sub WriteNullableQualifiedNameEncoded (name As String, ns As String, value As XmlQualifiedName, xsiType As XmlQualifiedName)
Parameters
- name
- String
The local name of the XML element to write.
- ns
- String
The namespace of the XML element to write.
- value
- XmlQualifiedName
The XML qualified name to write in the body of the XML element.
- xsiType
- XmlQualifiedName
The name of the XML Schema data type to be written to the xsi:type
attribute.
Remarks
The protected members of XmlSerializationWriter are intended for use only by derived classes that are used internally within the .NET Framework XML serialization infrastructure.
When set to true
, the nil
attribute from the XML Schema instance namespace (abbreviated xsi
) indicates a null value.
The WriteNullableQualifiedNameEncoded method is called only when writing SOAP-encoded XML, as described in Section 5 of the SOAP 1.1 specification.
Applies to
.NET