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Service Reference is using Arrays instead of List<Type>, even when settings say to use List

I'm using Visual Studio 2010, and I've got a service reference to a web service we created. Our methods return objects that contain generic List properties:

public class ExampleResponse
{
  private System.Collections.Generic.List<int> intValues;

  [WCF::MessageBodyMember(Name = "IntValues")]
  public System.Collections.Generic.List<int> IntValues    
  {
    get { return intValues; }
    set { intValues= value; }
  }
}

On the client-side, it creates a References.cs file with int[] instead of List:

[System.ServiceModel.MessageBodyMemberAttribute(Namespace="SomeNamespace", Order=0)]
[System.Xml.Serialization.XmlArrayAttribute(IsNullable=true)]
[System.Xml.Serialization.XmlArrayItemAttribute(Namespace="http://schemas.microsoft.com/2003/10/Serialization/Arrays", IsNullable=false)]
public int[] IntValues;

On the service reference settings the Collection Type is set to use List, not Arrays. Yet, it's still doing so.

Any info on how to solve this would be extremely helpful, it seems to make no sense.

like image 420
Nathan Avatar asked Jul 01 '10 16:07

Nathan


2 Answers

Did you add a "Service Reference" or a "Web Reference"? It appears that the proxy was generated with the XmlSerializer instead of the DataContractSerializer. If the DataContractSerializer was used, you would have System.Runtime.Serialization... Attributes instead of the Xml.Serialization... attributes. How exactly did you generate this web reference? The updated XmlSerializer will convert all collections to Arrays, where as, the Datacontract serializer knows how to generate .Net DataTypes. Add Web Reference uses the XmlSerializer BTW.

Also, I'm curious about your use of MessageBodyMember. Why are you trying to generate your own MessageContracts. Messing with MessageContracts can be very dangerous, especially if you don't know exactly what you are doing.

Instead, try the following:

[DataContract]
public class ExampleResponse
{
    private System.Collections.Generic.List<int> intValues;

    [DataMember]
    public System.Collections.Generic.List<int> IntValues
    {
        get { return intValues; }
        set { intValues = value; }
    }
}

See how that works for you and let us know.

like image 136
CkH Avatar answered Nov 13 '22 00:11

CkH


In the Add Service Reference, you can choose which type to use for Collections. For some reason Array is default. After changing it, I've had to delete the entire reference and re-add it, choosing List from the beginning. I've had weird issues changing it after the fact.

like image 25
Nate Avatar answered Nov 13 '22 00:11

Nate