Let's say I have the following class structu开发者_运维百科re (simplified from my real-world problem):
Public Class PC_People_Container
Private _people_list As New List(Of PL_Person)
Public Sub New()
End Sub
Public Sub Add(ByVal item As PL_Person)
_people_list.Add(item)
End Sub
Public Property PeopleList As List(Of PL_Person)
Get
Return _people_list
End Get
Set(ByVal value As List(Of PL_Person))
_people_list = value
End Set
End Property
End Class
Public Class PL_Person
Private _Name As String
Public Property Name As String
Get
Return _Name
End Get
Set(ByVal value As String)
_Name = value
End Set
End Property
Private _Contacts As ContactObject
Public Property Contacts As ContactObject
Get
Return _Contacts
End Get
Set(ByVal value As ContactObject)
_Contacts = value
End Set
End Property
Public Sub New()
End Sub
End Class
Public Class ContactObject
Public Property PhoneNumber As String
Public Property EmailAddress As String
Public Sub New()
End Sub
End Class
If I were to serialize this, I'd get the default assigned node names in my XML. That means my root is named PC_People_Container
and each person in the list is marked up as PL_Person
. I know I can change the root node using <XmlRoot(ElementName:="PeopleContainer")>
. The trouble is doing that for the subclasses. I can't use the <XmlRoot>
tag on PL_Person
class because there can't be two root elements, and IntelliSense throws a fit when I try to use the <XmlElement>
tag on a class like I would on a property. Is it even possible to control what those subclasses are named when they're serialized as child nodes?
PL_Person
and ContactObject
are not subclasses as you call them, they are merely property types.
This makes your question confusing because it suggests you may have a problem with inheritance (subclasses are classes that inherit from some base class) when in fact you just want your property elements to be named differently.
You should decorate your properties (not classes) with <XmlElement>
to specify custom name:
<XmlElement("Persons", GetType(PL_Person))>
Public Property PeopleList As List(Of PL_Person)
As an afterthought, I would definitely not recommend calling your classes using such an awkward convention. In .NET, you should not use any prefixes or underscores in class names. Just call it Person
.
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