There are some problems with your code.
The first problem in the code is that you are calling the default constructor on Area, which initializes _codArea to null. And then you try to call GetType on it, which fails with a NullReferenceException, as expected.
The second problem is that you want an attribute of a property of a class. So you must inspect (or reflect) the class, not the property. You see, when you write areaPoco.CodArea... the compiler resolves it to the result of your get expression, in this case, the field _codArea. By calling GetType() on _codArea, what you retrieve is a String type, not your Area type. I know this may seem confusing at first, but properties aren't types, so you can't reflect on them.
What you should do, then, is:
Area areaPoco = new Area();
NaoSelecionarAttr attr = (NaoSelecionarAttr) (areaPoco.GetType().GetProperties().Single(p => p.Name == "CodArea").GetCustomAttributes(typeof(NaoSelecionarAttr), true).Single());
bool naoSelecionar = attr.NaoSelecionar;
If I may, I want to give you some tips as well:
Your notation for the non-default constructor seems reminiscent of C/C++. There usually isn't a good reason to stick a "p" prefix in the parameters.
Instead of NaoSelecionar, which is a negative property, I recommend you work with "Selecionar". The deal is that you can easily confuse a negative sentence with its correspondent positive one. A month from now you will ask, "ok, the parameter is false, so should I select or not this property?". False usually means NOT, so, your default interpretation would be not to select something when the property is false.
Your default constructor is initializing a property to null. Just as I described above, this can result in bugs. Either initialize it to a default value (string.Empty), or remove the default constructor and use only the one that requires the user to provide a value to string. And validate those parameters as well -- the user might provide again a null to the string. (An object should be valid when first constructed)
- One final tip. Your
NaoSelecionar attribute gets a boolean parameter. The last bullet was exactly about that -- you can confuse whether having a true property for your attribute means "não" or "sim". Well, why don't you simply remove the parameter and then work with a negative parameter? There's no need to pass true or false to NaoSelecionar, since all you need to do is iterate through your class and find which properties have this attribute applied to them.
areaPoco.CodArea..GetCustomAttributes(). Did you try something that does compile? – Chris Shain Jun 14 '12 at 16:02