Reputation: 314
I want to map most properties of the current object (this
a FinancialBase
instance) to another object (the 'destination' object, the schedule
, an instance of a Schedule
class). However, I need to keep a small set of the destination's properties.
I've got it working with a 'hack' where I capture the values explicitly then use these in the AfterMap
function. See example code.
var id = schedule.Id;
var parentId = schedule.ParentId;
var scheduleNo = schedule.ScheduleNo;
var schName = schedule.SchName;
var config = new MapperConfiguration(
cfg => cfg.CreateMap<FinancialBase, Schedule>()
.ForMember(d => d.Id, opt => opt.Ignore())
.ForMember(d => d.ParentId, opt => opt.Ignore())
.ForMember(d => d.ScheduleNo, opt => opt.Ignore())
.ForMember(d => d.SchName, opt => opt.Ignore())
.AfterMap((s, d) => d.Id = id)
.AfterMap((s, d) => d.ParentId = parentId)
.AfterMap((s, d) => d.ScheduleNo = scheduleNo)
.AfterMap((s, d) => d.SchName = schName));
var mapper = config.CreateMapper();
schedule = mapper.Map<Schedule>(this);
I would prefer not to use the first four lines of my example but instead have them included using a conventional AutoMapper lambda expression. Possible?
Upvotes: 0
Views: 422
Reputation: 3344
I'd just use mapping to an existing object:
var existingSchedule = new Schedule()
{
Id = 12,
ParentId = 34,
ScheduleNo = 56,
SchName = "Foo",
};
var schedule = mapper.Map(this, existingSchedule);
And in the configuration leave the Ignore()
lines but remove those with AfterMap()
as they are no longer needed:
var config = new MapperConfiguration(
cfg => cfg.CreateMap<FinancialBase, Schedule>()
.ForMember(d => d.Id, opt => opt.Ignore())
.ForMember(d => d.ParentId, opt => opt.Ignore())
.ForMember(d => d.ScheduleNo, opt => opt.Ignore())
.ForMember(d => d.SchName, opt => opt.Ignore()));
Upvotes: 1