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Can I serialize a generic list of serializable objects without having to specify their type.

Something like the intention behind the broken code below:

List<ISerializable> serializableList = new List<ISerializable>();

XmlSerializer xmlSerializer = new XmlSerializer(serializableList.GetType());

serializableList.Add((ISerializable)PersonList);

using (StreamWriter streamWriter = System.IO.File.CreateText(fileName))
{
    xmlSerializer.Serialize(streamWriter, serializableList);
}

Edit:

For those who wanted to know detail: when I try to run this code, it errors on the XMLSerializer[...] line with:

Cannot serialize interface System.Runtime.Serialization.ISerializable.

If I change to List<object> I get "There was an error generating the XML document.". The InnerException detail is "{"The type System.Collections.Generic.List`1[[Project1.Person, ConsoleFramework, Version=1.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=null]] may not be used in this context."}"

The person object is defined as follows:

[XmlRoot("Person")]
public class Person
{
    string _firstName = String.Empty;
    string _lastName = String.Empty;

    private Person()
    {
    }

    public Person(string lastName, string firstName)
    {
        _lastName = lastName;
        _firstName = firstName;
    }

    [XmlAttribute(DataType = "string", AttributeName = "LastName")]
    public string LastName
    {
        get { return _lastName; }
        set { _lastName = value; }
    }

    [XmlAttribute(DataType = "string", AttributeName = "FirstName")]
    public string FirstName
    {
        get { return _firstName; }
        set { _firstName = value; }
    }
}

The PersonList is just a List<Person> .

This is just for testing though, so didn't feel the details were too important. The key is I have one or more different objects, all of which are serializable. I want to serialize them all to one file. I thought the easiest way to do that would be to put them in a generic list and serialize the list in one go. But this doesn't work.

I tried with List<IXmlSerializable> as well, but that fails with

System.Xml.Serialization.IXmlSerializable cannot be serialized because it does not have a parameterless constructor.

Sorry for the lack of detail, but I am a beginner at this and don't know what detail is required. It would be helpful if people asking for more detail tried to respond in a way that would leave me understanding what details are required, or a basic answer outlining possible directions.

Also thanks to the two answers I've got so far - I could have spent a lot more time reading without getting these ideas. It's amazing how helpful people are on this site.

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47% accept rate
Try it and see? – Justin Niessner Jul 31 at 14:12
I have tried it, it didn't work, I can't work out how to make it work. I tried changing it to List<object>, that didn't work either. – Simon D Jul 31 at 14:21
In what way did it "not work"? Give details if you want answers. – John Saunders Jul 31 at 14:41
what was the error you had? do all the objects implement ISerializable or just have the [Serializable] attribute? – Erich Mirabal Jul 31 at 14:42
John: the example above (when adapted to work with List<Object>), would yield an exception explaining that the specific types were not expected. – Robert Venables Jul 31 at 14:53
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6 Answers

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See Introducing XML Serialization:

Items That Can Be Serialized

The following items can be serialized using the XmLSerializer class:

  • Public read/write properties and fields of public classes
  • Classes that implement ICollection or IEnumerable
  • XmlElement objects
  • XmlNode objects
  • DataSet objects


In particular, ISerializable or the [Serializable] attribute does not matter.


Now that you've told us what your problem is ("it doesn't work" is not a problem statement), you can get answers to your actual problem, instead of guesses.

When you serialize a collection of a type, but will actually be serializing a collection of instances of derived types, you need to let the serializer know which types you will actually be serializing. This is also true for collections of object.

You need to use the XmlSerializer(Type,Type[]) constructor to give the list of possible types.

link|flag
+1 for the remark about ISerializable and [Serializable] – Thomas Levesque Jul 31 at 14:52
msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/… - link got mangled, thanks for this I'm understanding more...lots to read. – Simon D Jul 31 at 15:04
Also thanks for the advice on how to ask questions, it's appreciated. – Simon D Jul 31 at 15:09
+1. Yes, they don't matter for XML, but if he ever wants to use other types of serialization, they will. Also, since he was casting to ISerializable, it seemed like a perfectly basic question for him to check that the different types implemented that interface. I hope it wasn't a dig at my comment, and I think this was helpful in clarifying some of these details. – Erich Mirabal Jul 31 at 15:12
@Erich: don't be so sensitive. It's a fact, not a dig. I'm constantly seeing XML Serialization examples with [Serializable], which is just plain wrong. – John Saunders Jul 31 at 15:19
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I think Dreas' approach is ok. An alternative to this however is to have some static helper methods and implement IXmlSerializable on each of your methods e.g an XmlWriter extension method and the XmlReader one to read it back.

public static void SaveXmlSerialiableElement<T>(this XmlWriter writer, String elementName, T element) where T : IXmlSerializable
{
   writer.WriteStartElement(elementName);
   writer.WriteAttributeString("TYPE", element.GetType().AssemblyQualifiedName);
   element.WriteXml(writer);
   writer.WriteEndElement();
}

public static T ReadXmlSerializableElement<T>(this XmlReader reader, String elementName) where T : IXmlSerializable
{
   reader.ReadToElement(elementName);

   Type elementType = Type.GetType(reader.GetAttribute("TYPE"));
   T element = (T)Activator.CreateInstance(elementType);
   element.ReadXml(reader);
   return element;
}

If you do go down the route of using the XmlSerializer class directly, create serialization assemblies before hand if possible, as you can take a large performance hit in constructing new XmlSerializers regularly.

For a collection you need something like this:

public static void SaveXmlSerialiazbleCollection<T>(this XmlWriter writer, String collectionName, String elementName, IEnumerable<T> items) where T : IXmlSerializable
{
   writer.WriteStartElement(collectionName);
   foreach (T item in items)
   {
      writer.WriteStartElement(elementName);
      writer.WriteAttributeString("TYPE", item.GetType().AssemblyQualifiedName);
      item.WriteXml(writer);
      writer.WriteEndElement();
   }
   writer.WriteEndElement();
}
link|flag
This looks interesting, but I'm not sure how to use it exactly. I'll try to play with it a bit and see if I can get it to work. – Simon D Jul 31 at 14:32
Ok, firstly it all the objects in the collection need to be strongly typed to the same base type. The objects need to implement IXmlSerializable (not too hard). For a collection e.g. List<T> you'll then call something like: XmlWriter.SaveXmlSerializableCollection("item", this.collectionOfTs) – Ian Jul 31 at 14:37
btw, do you need to deserialize them too? If not I can probably provide a fuller example for you... – Ian Jul 31 at 14:41
I probably will deserialize, but that's already a fair bit to be getting on with. I'll try and put what you've given me already into practice. Thanks very much. – Simon D Jul 31 at 14:55
vote up 1 vote down

I think it's best if you use methods with generic arguments, like the following :

public static void SerializeToXml<T>(T obj, string fileName)
{
    using (var fileStream = new FileStream(fileName, FileMode.Create))
    { 
        var ser = new XmlSerializer(typeof(T)); 
        ser.Serialize(fileStream, obj);
    }
}

public static T DeserializeFromXml<T>(string xml)
{
    T result;
    var ser = new XmlSerializer(typeof(T));
    using (var tr = new StringReader(xml))
    {
        result = (T)ser.Deserialize(tr);
    }
    return result;
}
link|flag
OK perhaps, but this still doesn't do what I want - serialize a list of objects, possibly of different types. I want to be able to add a bunch of objects I want to save to a list, then serialize the entire list in one go (and to one file). – Simon D Jul 31 at 14:20
I don't like this option, because creating XmlSerializers is expensive. – Ian Jul 31 at 14:32
Ian, Would you please let me know how do you find XmlSerializers expensive? – paradisonoir Jul 31 at 14:50
This will cause a memory leak. – Rex M Jul 31 at 14:53
paradisonoir, construction of them creates temporary serialization assemblies for the given type (and all referenced types that need to be deserialized). If you have a large object graoh that needs serializing or just a large number of objects and you're repeatedly calling XmlSerializer then it can be slow. We found that it was taking 10-13 seconds to serialize and deserialize some settings, which was made almost instant by pre-building these serialization assemblies. – Ian Jul 31 at 14:55
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Here's a related question on how to (de)serialize a collection of objects that belong to classes deriving from the same base type.

link|flag
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You can't serialize a collection of objects without specifying the expected types. You must pass the list of expected types to the constructor of XmlSerializer (the extraTypes parameter) :

List<object> list = new List<object>();
list.Add(new Foo());
list.Add(new Bar());

XmlSerializer xs = new XmlSerializer(typeof(object), new Type[] {typeof(Foo), typeof(Bar)});
using (StreamWriter streamWriter = System.IO.File.CreateText(fileName))
{
    xmlSerializer.Serialize(streamWriter, list);
}

If all the objects of your list inherit from the same class, you can also use the XmlInclude attribute to specify the expected types :

[XmlInclude(typeof(Foo)), XmlInclude(typeof(Bar))]
public class MyBaseClass
{
}
link|flag
Hmm, that looks interesting. I'm assuming though it still won't deserialize? – Ian Jul 31 at 15:05
It will deserialize. Actually, during serialization, an extra attribute xsi:type is written on the element that represents the object. This allows XmlSerializer to know the actual type of the object – Thomas Levesque Jul 31 at 15:47
vote up 0 vote down

If the XML output requirement can be changed you can always use binary serialization - which is better suited for working with heterogeneous lists of objects. Here's an example:

    private void SerializeList(List<Object> Targets, string TargetPath)
    {

        IFormatter Formatter = new BinaryFormatter();

        using (FileStream OutputStream = System.IO.File.Create(TargetPath))
        {
            try
            {
                Formatter.Serialize(OutputStream, Targets);
            } catch (SerializationException ex) {
                //(Likely Failed to Mark Type as Serializable)
                //...
            }
    }

Use as such:

    [Serializable]
    public class Animal
    {
        public string Home { get; set; }
    }

    [Serializable]
    public class Person
    {
        public string Name { get; set; }
    }


    public void ExampleUsage() {

        List<Object> SerializeMeBaby = new List<Object> {
            new Animal { Home = "London, UK" },
            new Person { Name = "Skittles" }
        };

        string TargetPath = Path.Combine(
            Environment.GetFolderPath(Environment.SpecialFolder.ApplicationData),
            "Test1.dat");

        SerializeList(SerializeMeBaby, TargetPath);
    }
link|flag
Nice example. This is more what I was thinking - a number of different objects and I want to put them into one file. I prefer XML to binary though, but will try this. – Simon D Jul 31 at 15:24

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