I have scoured around StackOverflow and found multiple related questions, but none that answers it 'completely'. I might be wrong in my understanding, but wanted to check it -
I have a class
public class Foo
{
public List<Bar> Bars = new List<Bar>();
}
public class Bar
{
}
Due to some reflection craziness happening, this List is getting passed only as an object -
Foo f = new Foo();
object o = f;
CheckItem(o, "Bars");
// CheckItem has no clue about Bar class and is thus passed the 'Bars' Field name
public void CheckItem(Object obj, string fieldName)
{
var value = obj.GetType().GetField(fieldName).GetValue(obj); // returns f.Bars into value as object
foreach (var bar in value.Bars) // won't compile as value is type object
}
so, I use MakeGenericType and Activator.CreateInstance magic
var genericClass = typeof(List<>).MakeGenericType(new[] {value.GetType().FieldType.GetGenericArguments()[0]}); // makes a generic of type List<Bar>
var o = Activator.CreateInstance(genericClass); // o is again of type object
foreach (var bar in o.Bars) // will fail again
SO - How do I call the foreach loop to iterate over the members. Every example I have seen around MakeGenericType ends at just creating the object o, none talks about how to access its members, esp in a foreach loop like above.
Appreciate any inputs.
Thanks
If you don't need to know about the element type, all you need to do is cast to IEnumerable
:
var sequence = (IEnumerable) value;
foreach (var item in sequence)
{
// The type of the item variable is just object,
// but each value will be a reference to a Bar
}
(I'd strongly recommend using private fields and exposing properties instead, by the way - but that's a different matter.)
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