6

Suppose i have this Enum:

namespace BusinessRule
{
    public enum SalaryCriteria : int
        {
            [EnumDisplayName(DisplayName = "Per Month")]
            Per_Month = 1,
            [EnumDisplayName(DisplayName = "Per Year")]
            Per_Year = 2,
            [EnumDisplayName(DisplayName = "Per Week")]
            Per_Week = 3
        }
}

I have its name in a string variable like :

string EnumAtt = "SalaryCriteria";

i am trying to check if this Enum is defined by this name, and if defined i want to get its instance.i have tried like this, but type is returning null:

string EnumAtt = "SalaryCriteria";
Type myType1 = Type.GetType(EnumAtt);

i have also tried this:

string EnumAtt = "BusinessRule.SalaryCriteria";
Type myType1 = Type.GetType(EnumAtt);

any idea how i can achieve this.

15
  • @Rawling it is not a duplicate, i have seen these questions but my scenario is toally different Aug 20, 2014 at 12:07
  • @Rawling: He does not know the enum type at compile time. You can see that already from the different titles. Aug 20, 2014 at 12:09
  • @TimSchmelter you got it right, i want it to be on execution time Aug 20, 2014 at 12:09
  • 2
    I reopened it, but the title was a bit misleading.
    – ken2k
    Aug 20, 2014 at 12:10
  • 1
    Also here: stackoverflow.com/questions/851248/…
    – dbc
    Aug 20, 2014 at 12:24

4 Answers 4

15

To search all loaded assemblies in the current AppDomain for a given enum -- without having the fully qualified assembly name -- you can do:

    public static Type GetEnumType(string enumName)
    {
        foreach (var assembly in AppDomain.CurrentDomain.GetAssemblies())
        {
            var type = assembly.GetType(enumName);
            if (type == null)
                continue;
            if (type.IsEnum)
                return type;
        }
        return null;
    }

For instance (picking a semi-random enum which is not in my assembly):

var type1 = Type.GetType("System.Xml.Linq.LoadOptions") // Returns null.
var type2 = GetEnumType("System.Xml.Linq.LoadOptions") // Returns successfully.

You name should still include the namespace.

4

A LINQ-inspired answer:

public static Type GetEnumType(string name)
{
  return 
   (from assembly in AppDomain.CurrentDomain.GetAssemblies()
    let type = assembly.GetType(name)
    where type != null
       && type.IsEnum
    select type).FirstOrDefault();
}

The reason is that you need to go through all loaded assemblies, not only the current assembly.

2

This works great for me.

Type myType1 = Type.GetType("BusinessRule.SalaryCriteria");

enter image description here

I tried it without "EnumDisplayName" attribute.

2
  • The type is defined in a different assembly, so you'll have to use the assembly qualified name.
    – ken2k
    Aug 20, 2014 at 12:24
  • @ken2k how to know the assembly name what is the assembly name? Aug 20, 2014 at 12:25
0

This works well:

using System;

namespace BusinessRule
{
  public enum SalaryCriteria : int
  {
    Per_Month = 1,

    Per_Year = 2,

    Per_Week = 3
  }
}

namespace ConsoleApplication16
{
  internal class Program
  {
    private static void Main()
    {
      string EnumAtt = "BusinessRule.SalaryCriteria";
      Type myType1 = Type.GetType(EnumAtt);

      Console.WriteLine(myType1.AssemblyQualifiedName);
      Console.ReadLine();
    }
  }
}
1
  • The type is defined in a different assembly, so you'll have to use the assembly qualified name.
    – ken2k
    Aug 20, 2014 at 12:24

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