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Getting the fully qualified name of a type from a TypeInfo object

Tags:

c#

roslyn

Is it somehow possible to get the fully qualified name of the type contained in a TypeInfo object?

In the debugger many of these values nicely show up as System.Int32 but when it's printed out, not one of them contains this fully qualified name. I need this to provide as an argument to Type.GetType().

var typeInfo = semanticModel.GetTypeInfo(argument);
var w = typeInfo.ToString(); // Microsoft.CodeAnalysis.TypeInfo
var y = typeInfo.Type.ToString(); // int
var z = typeInfo.Type.ToDisplayString(); // int 
var a = typeInfo.Type.OriginalDefinition.ToDisplayString(); // int
var b = typeInfo.Type.OriginalDefinition.ToString(); // int
var c = typeInfo.Type.Name; // Int32
var d = typeInfo.Type.MetadataName; // Int32
var e = typeInfo.Type.ToDisplayParts(); // {int}
var f = typeInfo.Type.ContainingNamespace; // System

Note that this should work for every type so I can't just concatenate the namespace with the name.

Alternatively: is there another (more suited?) way to get the exact type?

For context: I want to check if the type-parameters of a class contain a few specific methods. Therefore my approach was to get the parameters from the TypeArgumentListSyntax and get the TypeInfo from each TypeSyntax object.

like image 287
Jeroen Vannevel Avatar asked Apr 26 '14 01:04

Jeroen Vannevel


2 Answers

The ToDisplayString method lets you pass in a "format" object which has a huge number of options for controlling how you want to format stuff:

var symbolDisplayFormat = new SymbolDisplayFormat(
    typeQualificationStyle: SymbolDisplayTypeQualificationStyle.NameAndContainingTypesAndNamespaces);

string fullyQualifiedName = typeSymbol.ToDisplayString(symbolDisplayFormat);

The reason your getting keywords like "int" is the default format is including the SymbolDisplayMiscellaneousOptions.UseSpecialTypes flag which specifies to use the language keywords for special types vs. the regular name.

like image 145
Jason Malinowski Avatar answered Oct 22 '22 04:10

Jason Malinowski


I couldn't find something built-in either and I'm quite sure this isn't the most elegant way, but it worked for me to construct a qualified type name like this:

private static string GetQualifiedTypeName(ISymbol symbol)
{
    return symbol.ContainingNamespace 
        + "." + symbol.Name 
        + ", " + symbol.ContainingAssembly;
}

If you don't need an assembly qualified type name don't concatenate ContainingAssembly at the end of the last line.

like image 5
andyp Avatar answered Oct 22 '22 05:10

andyp