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Serializing Name/Value Pairs in a Custom Object via Web Service

This is a very complicated question concerning how to serialize data via a web service call, when the data is not-strongly typed. I'll try to lay it out as best possible.

Sample Storage Object:

[Serializable]
public class StorageObject {
  public string Name { get; set; }
  public string Birthday { get; set; }
  public List<NameValuePairs> OtherInfo { get; set; }  
}
[Serializable]   
public class NameValuePairs {
  public string Name { get; set; }
  public string Value { get; set; }
}

Sample Use:

[WebMethod]
    public List<StorageObject> GetStorageObjects() {
      List<StorageObject> o = new List<StorageObject>() {
        new StorageObject() { 
          Name = "Matthew",
          Birthday = "Jan 1st, 2008", 
          OtherInfo = new List<NameValuePairs>() {
            new NameValuePairs() { Name = "Hobbies", Value = "Programming" },
            new NameValuePairs() { Name = "Website", Value = "Stackoverflow.com" }
          }
        },
        new StorageObject() { 
          Name = "Joe",
          Birthday = "Jan 10th, 2008",
          OtherInfo = new List<NameValuePairs>() { 
            new NameValuePairs() { Name = "Hobbies", Value = "Programming" },
            new NameValuePairs() { Name = "Website", Value = "Stackoverflow.com" }
          }
        }
      };

      return o;
    }

Return Value from Web Service:

<StorageObject>
    <Name>Matthew</Name>
    <Birthday>Jan 1st, 2008</Birthday>
    <OtherInfo>
        <NameValuePairs>
            <Name>Hobbies</Name>
            <Value>Programming</Value>
        </NameValuePairs>
        <NameValuePairs>
            <Name>Website</Name>
            <Value>Stackoverflow.com</Value>
        </NameValuePairs>
    </OtherInfo>
</StorageObject>

What I want:

<OtherInfo>
    <Hobbies>Programming</Hobbies>
    <Website>Stackoverflow.com</Website>
</OtherInfo>

The Reason & Other Stuff:

First, I'm sorry for the length of the post, but I wanted to give reproducible code as well.

I want it in this format, because I'm consuming the web services from PHP. I want to easily go:

// THIS IS IMPORANT

In PHP => "$Result["StorageObject"]["OtherInfo"]["Hobbies"]".  

If it's in the other format, then there would be no way for me to accomplish that, at all. Additionally, in C# if I am consuming the service, I would also like to be able to do the following:

// THIS IS IMPORANT

In C# => var m = ServiceResult[0].OtherInfo["Hobbies"];

Unfortunately, I'm not sure how to accomplish this. I was able to get it this way, by building a custom Dictionary that implemented IXmlSerializer (see StackOverflow: IXmlSerializer Dictionary), however, it blew the WSDL schema out of the water. It's also much too complicated, and produced horrible results in my WinFormsTester application!

Is there any way to accomplish this ? What type of objects do I need to create ? Is there any way to do this /other than by making a strongly typed collection/ ? Obviously, if I make it strongly typed like this:

public class OtherInfo {
  public string Hobbies { get; set; }
  public string FavoriteWebsite { get; set; }
}

Then it would work perfectly, I would have no WSDL issues, I would be able to easily access it from PHP, and C# (.OtherInfo.Hobbies).

However, I would completely lose the point of NVP's, in that I would have to know in advance what the list is, and it would be unchangeable.. say, from a Database.

Thanks everyone!! I hope we're able to come up with some sort of solution to this. Here's are the requirements again:

  1. WSDL schema should not break
  2. Name value pairs (NVP's) should be serialized into attribute format
  3. Should be easy to access NVP's in PHP by name ["Hobbies"]
  4. Should be easy to access in C# (and be compatible with it's Proxy generator)
  5. Be easily serializable
  6. Not require me to strongly type the data

Now, I am /completely/ open to input on a better/different way to do this. I'm storing some relatively "static" information (like Name), and a bunch of pieces of data. If there's a better way, I'd love to hear it.

like image 903
Matthew M. Avatar asked Nov 01 '08 01:11

Matthew M.


2 Answers

This is like dynamic properties for a object. C# is not quite a dynamic language unlike javascript or maybe PHP can parse the object properties on the fly. The following two methods are what I can think of. The second one might fit into your requirements.

The KISS Way

The Keep It Simple Stupid way

public class StorageObject {
  public string Name { get; set; }
  public string Birthday { get; set; }
  public List<string> OtherInfo { get; set; }  
}

You can have name value pairs which is separated by '|'

OtherInfo = {"Hobbies|Programming", "Website|Stackoverflow.com"}

Serialized forms

<StorageObject>
    <Name>Matthew</Name>
    <Birthday>Jan 1st, 2008</Birthday>
    <OtherInfo>
        <string>Hobbies|Programming</string>
        <string>Website|Stackoverflow.com</string>
    </OtherInfo>
</StorageObject>

The Dynamic Way in C#

Make the name value pair part become an XML element so that you can build it dynamically.

public class StorageObject {
  public string Name { get; set; }
  public string Birthday { get; set; }
  public XElement OtherInfo { get; set; } // XmlElement for dot net 2
}

You can easily build up OtherInfo object as element centric e.g.

XElement OtherInfo = new XElement("OtherInfo");
OtherInfo.Add( ..Hobbies xelement & text value..);
OtherInfo.Add( ..WebSite xelement & text value..);

The serialized form will be

<OtherInfo>
    <Hobbies>Programming</Hobbies>
    <Website>Stackoverflow.com</Website>
</OtherInfo>

or build it as attribute centric

XElement OtherInfo = new XElement("OtherInfo");
OtherInfo.Add( ..nvp xattribute Hobbies & value..);
OtherInfo.Add( ..nvp xattribute WebSite & value..);

<OtherInfo>
    <nvp n="Hobbies" v="Programming" />
    <nvp n="Website" v="Stackoverflow.com" />
</OtherInfo>

For any dynamic language, it can access to the properties directly. For the rest, they can access the value by read the XML. Reading XML is well supported by most of framework.

like image 174
Ray Lu Avatar answered Oct 18 '22 10:10

Ray Lu


This is what I've settled on.

Class Structure:

public class StorageObject {
  public string Name { get; set; }
  public string Birthday { get; set; }
  [XmlAnyElement("Info")]  // this prevents double-nodes in the XML
  public XElement OtherInfo { get; set; }
}

Usage:

StorageObject o = new StorageObject();
o.OtherInfo.Add(new XElement("Hobbies","Programming");
o.OtherInfo.Add(new XElement("Website","Stackoverflow.com");

Output:

<Info>
  <Hobbies>Programming</Hobbies>
  <Website>Stackoverflow.com</Website>
</Info>

I would like to thank everyone for their assistance, I really appreciate the help and ideas.

like image 29
Matthew M. Avatar answered Oct 18 '22 11:10

Matthew M.