yrahman
yrahman

Reputation: 950

Setting attributes of a property in partial classes

I have an employee class generated by Entity Framework (EF).

public partial class employee
{
    private string name;
    public string Name
    {
        get{return name;}
        set{ name = value;}
    }
}

Now I want to put a required attribute in the name property to use in for MVC3 validation in another employee partial class which is written by me in order to extend the one which is generated by EF so that I don't have to rewrite my code if I refresh the model generated by EF.

My written partial class is in the same assembly and name space.

public partial class employee
{
    // What should I write here to add required attribute in the Name property?
}

Upvotes: 24

Views: 15065

Answers (3)

jahu
jahu

Reputation: 5657

Another way to do this is:

private class EmployeeMetadata
{
    //the type HAS to match what your have in your Employee class
    [Required]
    public string Name { get; set; }
}

public partial class Employee : EmployeeMetadata
{
}

At least this worked with Linq to SQL. However I had trouble accessing the attributes through GetCustomAttributes (even using System.Attribute.GetCustomAttributes didn't seem to help). Nonetheless MVC did respect those attributes. Additionally this will not work with inheriting from interfaces. Passing attributes from interface will only work using MetadataType class attribute (see answer by Ladislav Mrnka).

Upvotes: 0

Ladislav Mrnka
Ladislav Mrnka

Reputation: 364249

It is actually possible only through buddy class but it is not recommended way. You should keep your validation in custom view model because often you need different validations for different views but your entity can keep only single set of validation attributes.

Example of buddy class:

using System.ComponentModel.DataAnnotations;

[MetadataType(typeof(EmployeeMetadata))]
public partial class Employee
{
  private class EmployeeMetadata
  {
     [Required]
     public object Name; // Type doesn't matter, it is just a marker
  }
}

Upvotes: 29

Jon Skeet
Jon Skeet

Reputation: 1499770

You can't, as far as I'm aware - it's just not feasible.

You should possibly look to see whether MVC3 has any way of adding attributes elsewhere (e.g. to the type) which relate to another property.

Alternatively, you could add a proxying property:

[ValidationAttributesHere]
public string ValidatedName
{
    get { return Name; }
    set { Name = value; }
}

Upvotes: 9

Related Questions