I wanted to use the Range
class to implement a solution.
My use case was to convert standard property names - e.g. CustomerName
, WindowSize
, etc. - into a JSON property name that would still be easy to read - as in customer_name
, window_size
.
Creating a JsonNamingPolicy
descendent, I overrode the ConvertName
method with the following implementation:
/// <summary>
/// Converts a property name like "CustomerName" and converts to "customer_name"
/// </summary>
/// <param name="name">the propery name</param>
/// <returns>property conversion</returns>
public override string ConvertName(string name) {
// using Regex to look for caps: "([A-Z]+)"
Match[] matches = regex.Matches(name)
.ToArray();
if (!matches.Any()) {
// no capitals to match
return name;
}
if (matches.Length == 1) {
// one match
return name.ToLower();
}
// multiple matches - we could use StringBuilder
string[] parts = new string[matches.Length];
int index = 0;
// this is somewhat verbose for debugging purposes
while (index < matches.Length) {
// get our match
Match m = matches[index];
// calculate range length
int length = index + 1 < matches.Length ?
// return the start of the next match
(matches[index + 1]).Index :
// return the end of the string
name.Length;
// create the range
Range range = (m.Index..length);
// insert the part
parts[index] = (name[range]).ToLower();
// increment the indexer
++index;
}
// construct property name
return string.Join("_", parts);
}
}
Note: I could use StringBuilder
as some people will likely prefer. I don't anticipate performance problems as this is a one and done scenario.
That being said, if I needed to serialize tons of data to go across the wire, I would likely forego this process altogether and design my properties with the desired naming convention.
For completeness, here is the source class:
// trimmed to the necessary bits for brevity
public class LaunchParameters : ILoadable {
#region properties
[JsonIgnore]
string ILoadable.Directory { get; } = CONFIG_DIR;
[JsonIgnore]
string ILoadable.FileName { get; } = CONFIG_FILE;
public Size WindowSize { get; set; } = new(1024, 768);
public string Title { get; init; } = "GLX Game";
[JsonIgnore]
public string Application => Title.Replace(" ", "_");
public string Label { get; init; }
public Version Version { get; init; }
[JsonIgnore]
public string WindowTitle => $"{Title} Window";
public string LogPath { get; init; } = @".\.logs";
public string CrashLogPath { get; init; } = @".\.crash_logs";
#endregion properties
}
... and the resulting JSON:
{
"window_size": {
"is_empty": false,
"width": 1024,
"height": 768
},
"title": "GLX Game",
"label": null,
"version": null,
"log_path": ".\\.logs",
"crash_log_path": ".\\.crash_logs"
}
string.Split("1234567", 2, 5) == { "12", "345", "67" }
? If so, there is no such method. If not, can you elaborate?