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The following code creates a physical XML file called employees.xml. But I don't want to create a physical file. Instead, I want to save the XML content to a variable. How can I modify the following code to save the XML data into a variable and not have it physically created?

using (XmlWriter writer = XmlWriter.Create("employees.xml"))
{
    writer.WriteStartDocument();
    writer.WriteStartElement("Employees");

    foreach (Employee employee in employees)
    {
        writer.WriteStartElement("Employee");

        writer.WriteElementString("ID", employee.Id.ToString());
        writer.WriteElementString("FirstName", employee.FirstName);
        writer.WriteElementString("LastName", employee.LastName);
        writer.WriteElementString("Salary", employee.Salary.ToString());

        writer.WriteEndElement();
    }

    writer.WriteEndElement();
    writer.WriteEndDocument();
}

5 Answers 5

3

You can write to MemoryStream and use

var stream = new MemoryStream();
var writer = XmlWriter.Create(stream);

You code would be modified like

var stream = new MemoryStream();    
using (XmlWriter writer = XmlWriter.Create(stream))
{
    writer.WriteStartDocument();
    writer.WriteStartElement("Employees");

    foreach (Employee employee in employees)
    {
       writer.WriteStartElement("Employee");
       writer.WriteElementString("Id", employee.Id.ToString());
       writer.WriteElementString("FirstName", employee.FirstName);
       writer.WriteElementString("LastName", employee.LastName);
       writer.WriteElementString("Salary", employee.Salary);
       writer.WriteEndElement();
    }

    writer.WriteEndElement();
    writer.WriteEndDocument();
}
string strXml = System.Text.ASCIIEncoding.UTF8.GetString(stream.ToArray())

You can select the encoding you need.

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1

Just a small modification in your code would give the desired output. You can use the StringWriter class and the final XML will be saved inside xmlString variable.

string xmlString = null;
using (StringWriter sw = new StringWriter())
{
    XmlTextWriter writer = new XmlTextWriter(sw);
    writer.Formatting = Formatting.Indented; // if you want it indented

    writer.WriteStartDocument();
    writer.WriteStartElement("Employees");

    foreach (Employee employee in employees)
    {
        writer.WriteStartElement("Employee");

        writer.WriteElementString("ID", employee.Id.ToString());
        writer.WriteElementString("FirstName", employee.FirstName);
        writer.WriteElementString("LastName", employee.LastName);
        writer.WriteElementString("Salary", employee.Salary.ToString());

        writer.WriteEndElement();
    }

    writer.WriteEndElement();
    writer.WriteEndDocument();

    xmlString = sw.ToString();
}
1

Rather than use XmlWriter, I would create a DOM object in memory - ideally with LINQ to XML, which will let you express the whole thing as a query:

var xml = new XDocument(new XElement("Employees"),
     employees.Select(e => new XElement("Employee",
         new XElement("ID", e.Id),
         new XElement("FirstName", employee.FirstName),
         new XElement("LastName", employee.LastName),
         new XElement("Salary", employee.Salary))));

You can now manipulate this XML (adding or removing elements etc) and when you want to save it to a file (or stream it across the network or whatever, you can do so easily).

If you want the string representation in a variable, you can just use ToString:

var xmlAsText = xml.ToString();
1

I will stay with same solution from @Adil. But want to add changes in your code:

Instead of writing a xml object manually(every member of class) you can use a XmlSerializer class. With this class you can then Deserialize xml object back to class instance

Second - if you want keep data of Employees in xml object and maybe later to change something in there, than you can use a XmlDocument. Here a code:

XmlSerializer _xSerialize = new XmlSerializer(_employees.GetType());
MemoryStream _mstream = new MemoryStream();

using (XmlWriter writer = XmlWriter.Create(_mstream))
{
    _xSerialize.Serialize(_mstream, _workers );
}

XmlDocument document = new XmlDocument();
document.Load(_mstream);

P.S. For Serialization working fine both classes Employees and Employee must have default constructor(with no parameters) and properties you want to xml must be public.

This what kind of classes I used for testing:

public class Employees
{
    public List<Employee> Workers { get; set; }

    public Employees()
    {
        this.Workers = new List<Employee>();
    }
}

public class Employee
{
    public Int32 ID{ get; set; }
    public string FirstName{ get; set; }
    public string LastName{ get; set; }
    public float Salary{ get; set; }

    public Employee() { }

    public Employee(Int32 id, string fname, string lname, float salary)
    {
        this.ID = id;
        this.FirstName = fname;
        this.LastName = lname;
        this.Salary = salary;
    }
}
0

Instead of using some stream you could write into a StringBuilder instance: XmlWriter.Create-Methode (StringBuilder)

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