Reputation: 8043
I have a simple class with two properties:
[XmlRoot("response")]
public class Response
{
[XmlAttribute("code")]
string Code { get; set; }
[XmlAttribute("message")]
string Message { get; set; }
}
I try to deserialize an XML string with XmlSerializer:
static void Main(string[] args)
{
string xml = "<response code=\"a\" message=\"b\" />";
using(var ms = new MemoryStream())
using(var sw = new StreamWriter(ms))
{
sw.Write(xml);
sw.Flush();
ms.Position = 0;
XmlSerializer ser = new XmlSerializer(typeof(Response));
ser.UnknownAttribute += new XmlAttributeEventHandler(ser_UnknownAttribute);
var obj = ser.Deserialize(ms);
}
}
static void ser_UnknownAttribute(object sender, XmlAttributeEventArgs e)
{
throw new NotImplementedException();
}
The UnknownAttribute
event gets fired at the code
attribute, it does not get deserialized.
What is the reason for this? Am I using the XmlAttributeAttribute wrong?
Upvotes: 2
Views: 282
Reputation: 726977
This is because the attributes are not public
in your class:
[XmlRoot("response")]
public class Response
{
[XmlAttribute("code")]
public string Code { get; set; }
[XmlAttribute("message")]
public string Message { get; set; }
}
From the documentation of XmlAttributeAttribute
(emphasis is mine):
You can assign the XmlAttributeAttribute only to public fields or public properties that return a value (or array of values) that can be mapped to one of the XML Schema definition language (XSD) simple types (including all built-in datatypes derived from the XSD anySimpleType type).
Upvotes: 4