Reputation: 48522
I have a dynamic object that looks as follows:
this.ChartDetails.Chart
'Chart' is dynamic. I want to see if a dynamic property exists on Chart named LeftYAxis. What is the best way to do this on dynamic objects?
I don't think this is a duplicate of How to detect if a property exists on an ExpandoObject? because it doesn't discuss the best method to do this for dynamic objects.
Upvotes: 5
Views: 17137
Reputation: 9
This Works if the dynamic object is a json/open-standard format.
I made two different method helpers one for open-standard format and one for "standard object".
// Checks if object typed json or xml has a specific property
public static bool IsPropertyExistsOpenStandardFormat(dynamic dynamicObject, string propertyName)
{
try
{
var x = dynamicObject[propertyName];
if (x != null)
return true;
}
catch
{
return false;
}
}
// Checks if standard object has a specific property
public static bool IsPropertyExistsStandard(dynamic dynamicObject, string propertyName)
{
return dynamicObject.GetType().GetProperty(propertyName) != null;
}
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 359
This one is working -:
public static bool IsPropertyExists(dynamic dynamicObj, string property)
{
try
{
var value=dynamicObj[property].Value;
return true;
}
catch (RuntimeBinderException)
{
return false;
}
}
Upvotes: -1
Reputation: 11773
For a variety of reasons it's best to avoid try/catch blocks for control flow. Therefore, while Christopher's method attains the desired result, I find this preferable:
this.ChartDetails.Chart.GetType().GetProperty("LeftYAxis") != null;
Upvotes: 7
Reputation: 19074
bool isDefined = false;
object axis = null;
try
{
axis = this.ChartDetails.Chart.LeftYAxis;
isDefined = true;
}
catch(RuntimeBinderException)
{ }
This is what happens at runtime in the first place. (When you access a property the 'dynamic' piece of things only happens when a first-chance exception gets handled by the object's override of DynamicObject
's TryGetMember
and TrySetMember
Some objects (like ExpandoObject
) are actually dictionaries under the hood and you can check them directly as follows:
bool isDefined = ((IDictionary<string, object>)this.ChartDetails.Chart)
.ContainsKey("LeftYAxis");
Basically: without knowing what actual type ChartDetails.Chart
is (if it's an ExpandoObject
a plain ol' subclass of object
or a subclass of DynamicObject
) there's no way besides the try/catch above. If you wrote the code for ChartDetails
and Chart
or have access to the source code you can determine what methods exist for the object and use those to check.
Upvotes: 6