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RespondidaEntity Name reflector

  • viernes, 04 de julio de 2008 7:33hnchass Medallas del usuarioMedallas del usuarioMedallas del usuarioMedallas del usuarioMedallas del usuario
     

    Hi All

     

    I have a Blog entity with a Blog_ID field. Is it possible for me to do some reflector to get the Blog_ID and return it as string?

     

    It is because I am building a selectlist but don't want to hard code like this.

    new SelectList(blog,"blog_ID","blog_Description");

     

    I want to make it strong-typed, is it possible?

     

    Regards

    Alex

Respuestas

  • viernes, 04 de julio de 2008 9:05Vasco Oliveira Medallas del usuarioMedallas del usuarioMedallas del usuarioMedallas del usuarioMedallas del usuario
     Respondida

    Yes, it's possible.

     

    In my opinion, the best way is to check EntityKeyMembers array of the EntityKey property of the Blog entity. You can then get a name list if your key fields.

     

    On the other hand you can use reflection on the Blog entity and iterate through all properties to see their CustomAttributes and check if it's of type EdmScalarPropertyAttribute and if so, see if EntityKeyProperty is true. For example, to get a list of all key properties:

     

     

    foreach (PropertyInfo prop in typeof(Blog).GetProperties())

    {

    object[] attrs = prop.GetCustomAttributes(false);

    foreach (object obj in attrs)

    {

    if (obj.GetType() == typeof(EdmScalarPropertyAttribute))

    {

    EdmScalarPropertyAttribute attr = (EdmScalarPropertyAttribute)obj;

    if (attr.EntityKeyProperty)

    keyList.Add(prop.Name);

    }

    }

    }

     

     

     

    Hope it helps

  • viernes, 04 de julio de 2008 19:33Greg Bachraty Medallas del usuarioMedallas del usuarioMedallas del usuarioMedallas del usuarioMedallas del usuario
     Respondida

    Instead of using strings or reflection you could consider lambda expressions.

    You can create a generic SelectList with this constructor:

    Code Snippet

    SelectList(T entity, Expression<Func<T,object>> field1, Expression<Func<T,object>> field2)

     

    Then you can use it like this with strong typing:

    Code Snippet

    new SelectList(blog, b=>blog_ID, b=>blog_Description);

     

    You don't even need to create a generic class if you don't want to and mine the corresponding strings from the expression trees above:

    Code Snippet

    static SelectList CreateList<T>(T entity, Expression<Func<T,object>> field1, Expression<Func<T,object>> field2)

    {

        string f1name = (field1.Body as MemberExpression).Member.Name;
        string f2name = (field2.Body as MemberExpression).Member.Name;

        return new SelectList(entity, f1name, f2name);
    }

     

    SelectList.Create(blog, b=>blog_ID, b=>blog_Description);

    Although this latter aproach will only throw a runtime exception if you use different expressions than the intended simple field access.

Todas las respuestas

  • viernes, 04 de julio de 2008 9:05Vasco Oliveira Medallas del usuarioMedallas del usuarioMedallas del usuarioMedallas del usuarioMedallas del usuario
     Respondida

    Yes, it's possible.

     

    In my opinion, the best way is to check EntityKeyMembers array of the EntityKey property of the Blog entity. You can then get a name list if your key fields.

     

    On the other hand you can use reflection on the Blog entity and iterate through all properties to see their CustomAttributes and check if it's of type EdmScalarPropertyAttribute and if so, see if EntityKeyProperty is true. For example, to get a list of all key properties:

     

     

    foreach (PropertyInfo prop in typeof(Blog).GetProperties())

    {

    object[] attrs = prop.GetCustomAttributes(false);

    foreach (object obj in attrs)

    {

    if (obj.GetType() == typeof(EdmScalarPropertyAttribute))

    {

    EdmScalarPropertyAttribute attr = (EdmScalarPropertyAttribute)obj;

    if (attr.EntityKeyProperty)

    keyList.Add(prop.Name);

    }

    }

    }

     

     

     

    Hope it helps

  • viernes, 04 de julio de 2008 19:33Greg Bachraty Medallas del usuarioMedallas del usuarioMedallas del usuarioMedallas del usuarioMedallas del usuario
     Respondida

    Instead of using strings or reflection you could consider lambda expressions.

    You can create a generic SelectList with this constructor:

    Code Snippet

    SelectList(T entity, Expression<Func<T,object>> field1, Expression<Func<T,object>> field2)

     

    Then you can use it like this with strong typing:

    Code Snippet

    new SelectList(blog, b=>blog_ID, b=>blog_Description);

     

    You don't even need to create a generic class if you don't want to and mine the corresponding strings from the expression trees above:

    Code Snippet

    static SelectList CreateList<T>(T entity, Expression<Func<T,object>> field1, Expression<Func<T,object>> field2)

    {

        string f1name = (field1.Body as MemberExpression).Member.Name;
        string f2name = (field2.Body as MemberExpression).Member.Name;

        return new SelectList(entity, f1name, f2name);
    }

     

    SelectList.Create(blog, b=>blog_ID, b=>blog_Description);

    Although this latter aproach will only throw a runtime exception if you use different expressions than the intended simple field access.

  • sábado, 05 de julio de 2008 5:59hnchass Medallas del usuarioMedallas del usuarioMedallas del usuarioMedallas del usuarioMedallas del usuario
     

    Excellent Solution!!! Thanks.

     

    However, My selectlist's original data type is a List and the code is as follows :-

     

    ViewData["Blog_TypeList"] = WebUtility.CreateList (blog_TypeList.OrderBy(c => c.Seq), c => c.First().Blog_Type_ID, c => c.First().Description);

     

    Could I remove the First() from the code?


           

  • sábado, 05 de julio de 2008 7:59Greg Bachraty Medallas del usuarioMedallas del usuarioMedallas del usuarioMedallas del usuarioMedallas del usuario
     

    You can change the "T entity" parameter to "IEnumerable<T> entities". The compiler will still deduce the generic parameter for the function.

  • sábado, 05 de julio de 2008 9:03hnchass Medallas del usuarioMedallas del usuarioMedallas del usuarioMedallas del usuarioMedallas del usuario
     

    Thanks. Cool. It works.

     

    Besides, just curious, for this solution:-

     

    Code Snippet

    SelectList(T entity, Expression<Func<T,object>> field1, Expression<Func<T,object>> field2)

     

    Then you can use it like this with strong typing:

    Code Snippet

    new SelectList(blog, b=>blog_ID, b=>blog_Description);

     

     
    Where do I put the constructor, modify the source code?
     
     
  • viernes, 03 de julio de 2009 4:29Shimmy Weitzhandler Medallas del usuarioMedallas del usuarioMedallas del usuarioMedallas del usuarioMedallas del usuario
     Tiene código
            public static string[] GetIdField<TEntity>() where TEntity : EntityObject
            {
                IEnumerable<string> ids = from p in typeof(TEntity).GetProperties()
                                          where (from a in p.GetCustomAttributes(false)
                                                 where a is EdmScalarPropertyAttribute &&
                                                 ((EdmScalarPropertyAttribute)a).EntityKeyProperty
                                                 select true).FirstOrDefault()
                                          select p.Name;
    
                return ids.ToArray();
            }

    Shimmy