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Passing int list as a parameter to a web user control

I want to pass an int list (List) as a declarative property to a web user control like this:

<UC:MyControl runat="server" ModuleIds="1,2,3" />

I created a TypeConverter to do this:

public class IntListConverter : System.ComponentModel.TypeConverter
{
    public override bool CanConvertFrom(
           System.ComponentModel.ITypeDescriptorContext context, 
           Type sourceType)
    {
        if (sourceType == typeof(string)) return true;
        return base.CanConvertFrom(context, sourceType);
    }
    public override object ConvertFrom(
      System.ComponentModel.ITypeDescriptorContext context, 
      System.Globalization.CultureInfo culture, object value)
    {
        if (value is string)
        {
            string[] v = ((string)value).Split(
                new char[] { ',' }, StringSplitOptions.RemoveEmptyEntries);
            List<int> list = new List<int>();
            foreach (string s in vals)
            {
                list.Add(Convert.ToInt32(s));
            }
            return list
        }
        return base.ConvertFrom(context, culture, value);
    }
    public override bool CanConvertTo(ITypeDescriptorContext context,
      Type destinationType)
    {
        if (destinationType == typeof(InstanceDescriptor)) return true;
        return base.CanConvertTo(context, destinationType);
    }
    public override object ConvertTo(ITypeDescriptorContext context,
      System.Globalization.CultureInfo culture, object value, Type destinationType)
    {
        if (destinationType == typeof(InstanceDescriptor) && value is List<int>)
        {
            List<int> list = (List<int>)value;
            ConstructorInfo construcor = typeof(List<int>).GetConstructor(new Type[] { typeof(IEnumerable<int>) });
            InstanceDescriptor id = new InstanceDescriptor(construcor, new object[] { list.ToArray() });
            return id;
        }
        return base.ConvertTo(context, culture, value, destinationType);
    }
}

And then added the attribute to my property:

[TypeConverter(typeof(IntListConverter))]
public List<int> ModuleIds
{
    get { ... }; set { ... };
}

But I get this error at runtime:

Unable to generate code for a value of type 'System.Collections.Generic.List'1[[System.Int32, mscorlib, Version=2.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b77a5c561934e089]]'. This error occurred while trying to generate the property value for ModuleIds.

My question is similar to one found here, but the solution does not solve my problem:

Update: I found a page which solved the first problem. I updated the code above to show my fixes. The added code is the CanConvertTo and ConvertTo methods. Now I get a different error.:

Object reference not set to an instance of an object.

This error seems to be indirectly caused by something in the ConvertTo method.

like image 634
Kevin Albrecht Avatar asked Oct 30 '08 19:10

Kevin Albrecht


1 Answers

After hooking a debugger into Cassini, I see that the null ref is actually coming from System.Web.Compilation.CodeDomUtility.GenerateExpressionForValue, which is basically trying to get an expression for the int[] array you pass into the List constructor. Since there's no type descriptor for the int[] array, it fails (and throws a null ref in the process, instead of the "can't generate property set exception" that it should).

I can't figure out a built in way of getting a serializable value into a List<int>, so I just used a static method:

class IntListConverter : TypeConverter {
    public static List<int> FromString(string value) {
       return new List<int>(
          value
           .Split(new char[] { ',' }, StringSplitOptions.RemoveEmptyEntries)
           .Select(s => Convert.ToInt32(s))
       );
    }

    public override object ConvertTo(ITypeDescriptorContext context, CultureInfo culture, object value, Type destinationType) {
        if (destinationType == typeof(InstanceDescriptor)) {
            List<int> list = (List<int>)value;
            return new InstanceDescriptor(this.GetType().GetMethod("FromString"),
                new object[] { string.Join(",", list.Select(i => i.ToString()).ToArray()) }
            );
        }
        return base.ConvertTo(context, culture, value, destinationType);
    }
}
like image 165
Mark Brackett Avatar answered Sep 18 '22 14:09

Mark Brackett