I have a couple extension methods that handle serialization of my classes, and since it can be a time consuming process, they are created once per class, and handed out by this method.
public static XmlSerializer GetSerializerFor(Type typeOfT)
{
if (!serializers.ContainsKey(typeOfT))
{
var xmlAttributes = new XmlAttributes();
var xmlAttributeOverrides = new XmlAttributeOverrides();
System.Diagnostics.Debug.WriteLine(string.Format("XmlSerializerFactory.GetSerializerFor(typeof({0}));", typeOfT));
xmlAttributes.Xmlns = false;
xmlAttributeOverrides.Add(typeOfT, xmlAttributes);
var newSerializer = new XmlSerializer(typeOfT, xmlAttributeOverrides);
serializers.Add(typeOfT, newSerializer);
}
return serializers[typeOfT];
}
This is called by the extension method .Serialize()
public static XElement Serialize(this object source)
{
try
{
var serializer = XmlSerializerFactory.GetSerializerFor(source.GetType());
var xdoc = new XDocument();
using (var writer = xdoc.CreateWriter())
{
serializer.Serialize(writer, source, new XmlSerializerNamespaces(new[] { new XmlQualifiedName("", "") }));
}
return (xdoc.Document != null) ? xdoc.Document.Root : new XElement("Error", "Document Missing");
}
catch (Exception x)
{
return new XElement("Error", x.ToString());
}
}
Unfortunately, when Serializing classes that are auto-generated, they have the attribute XmlTypeAttribute(Namespace="http://tempuri.org/")
applied to them.
This causes the deserialization by the the non-auto-generated counterparts to fail.
I need the serializer to completely ignore and not apply the namespace, but what I have written in the first block of code doesn't seem to remove it, I still end up with xml like this
<Note>
<ID xmlns="http://tempuri.org/">12</ID>
<Author xmlns="http://tempuri.org/">
<ID>1234</ID>
<Type>Associate</Type>
<IsAvailable>false</IsAvailable>
</Author>
<Created xmlns="http://tempuri.org/">2010-06-22T09:38:01.5024351-05:00</Created>
<Text xmlns="http://tempuri.org/">This is an update</Text>
</Note>
Instead of the same, minus the xmlns="http://tempuri.org/"
attribute.
Please help, thanks, this is driving me crazy!
EDIT:
I know the problem, just not how to fix it.
My class, isn't just full of simple types.
It contains properties with types of other classes. Which are also auto-generated with the XmlTypeAttribute(Namespace = "http://tempuri.org/")
attribute. So what is happening, is that when serialization occurs, and it serializes the properties of my class, they aren't going through my custom serialization, and thus, are having the attribute applied and not overridden.
Now I just need to figure out how to jump that hoop. Any thoughts as to how?
EDIT 2:
The following works to serialize WITHOUT xmlns... but I'm having a problem on the deserialization end, just not yet sure if it's related or not
public static XmlSerializer GetSerializerFor(Type typeOfT)
{
if (!serializers.ContainsKey(typeOfT))
{
var xmlAttributes = new XmlAttributes();
var xmlAttributeOverrides = new XmlAttributeOverrides();
System.Diagnostics.Debug.WriteLine(string.Format("XmlSerializerFactory.GetSerializerFor(typeof({0}));", typeOfT));
xmlAttributes.XmlType = new XmlTypeAttribute
{
Namespace = ""
};开发者_StackOverflow社区
xmlAttributes.Xmlns = false;
var types = new List<Type> {typeOfT, typeOfT.BaseType};
foreach (var property in typeOfT.GetProperties())
{
types.Add(property.PropertyType);
}
types.RemoveAll(t => t.ToString().StartsWith("System."));
foreach (var type in types)
{
xmlAttributeOverrides.Add(type, xmlAttributes);
}
var newSerializer = new XmlSerializer(typeOfT, xmlAttributeOverrides);
//var newSerializer = new XmlSerializer(typeOfT, xmlAttributeOverrides, extraTypes.ToArray(), new XmlRootAttribute(), string.Empty);
//var newSerializer = new XmlSerializer(typeOfT, string.Empty);
serializers.Add(typeOfT, newSerializer);
}
return serializers[typeOfT];
}
EDIT3: Ended up using solution from How to remove all namespaces from XML with C#?
public static XElement RemoveAllNamespaces(this XElement source)
{
return !source.HasElements
? new XElement(source.Name.LocalName)
{
Value = source.Value
}
: new XElement(source.Name.LocalName, source.Elements().Select(el => RemoveAllNamespaces(el)));
}
A working solution, for the record!
var ns = new XmlSerializerNamespaces();
ns.Add("", "");
var serializer = new XmlSerializer(yourType);
serializer.Serialize(xmlTextWriter, someObject, ns);
No problem - just pass an empty string as the default namespace to the XML serializer:
XmlSerializer newSerializer =
new XmlSerializer(typeOfT, "");
Unfortunately, there's no easy constructor overload if you really need to define the XmlAttributeOverrides
and the default namespace - so either you can skip the XmlAttributeOverrides
and use that constructor I mentioned, or you need to use the one that defines all possible parameters (including XmlAttributeOverrides and default XML namespaces - and a few more).
public static byte[] SerializeByteByType(object objectToSerialize, Type type)
{
XmlWriterSettings xmlSetting = new XmlWriterSettings()
{
NewLineOnAttributes = false,
OmitXmlDeclaration = true,
Indent = false,
NewLineHandling = NewLineHandling.None,
Encoding = Encoding.UTF8,
NamespaceHandling = NamespaceHandling.OmitDuplicates
};
using (MemoryStream stm = new MemoryStream())
{
using (XmlWriter writer = XmlWriter.Create(stm, xmlSetting))
{
var xmlAttributes = new XmlAttributes();
var xmlAttributeOverrides = new XmlAttributeOverrides();
xmlAttributes.Xmlns = false;
xmlAttributes.XmlType = new XmlTypeAttribute() { Namespace = "" };
xmlAttributeOverrides.Add(type, xmlAttributes);
XmlSerializer serializer = new XmlSerializer(type, xmlAttributeOverrides);
//Use the following to serialize without namespaces
XmlSerializerNamespaces xmlSrzNamespace = new XmlSerializerNamespaces();
xmlSrzNamespace.Add("", "");
serializer.Serialize(writer, objectToSerialize, xmlSrzNamespace);
stm.Flush();
stm.Position = 0;
}
return stm.ToArray();
}
}
public static string SerializeToXml(object obj)
{
UTF8Encoding encoding = new UTF8Encoding(false);
var xmlAttributes = new XmlAttributes();
xmlAttributes.Xmlns = false;
xmlAttributes.XmlType = new XmlTypeAttribute() { Namespace = "" };
var xmlAttributeOverrides = new XmlAttributeOverrides();
var types = obj.GetType().Assembly.GetTypes().Where(t => string.Equals(t.Namespace, obj.GetType().Namespace, StringComparison.Ordinal));
foreach (var t in types) xmlAttributeOverrides.Add(t, xmlAttributes);
XmlSerializer sr = new XmlSerializer(obj.GetType(), xmlAttributeOverrides);
MemoryStream memoryStream = new MemoryStream();
StreamWriter writer = new StreamWriter(memoryStream, encoding);
XmlSerializerNamespaces namespaces = new XmlSerializerNamespaces();
namespaces.Add(string.Empty, string.Empty);
// get the stream from the writer
memoryStream = writer.BaseStream as MemoryStream;
sr.Serialize(writer, obj, namespaces);
// apply encoding to the stream
return (encoding.GetString(memoryStream.ToArray()).Trim());
}
It will even work for complex object containing nested object Credits to user3444796 and Mentor
Working solution (without empty xmlns attribute):
var ns = new XmlSerializerNamespaces(new[] { XmlQualifiedName.Empty });
XmlSerializer serializer = new XmlSerializer(typeof(XmlInfo));
XmlDocument doc = new XmlDocument();
using (var ms = new MemoryStream()) {
serializer.Serialize(ms, this, ns);
ms.Position = 0;
doc.Load(ms);
}
精彩评论