Banana List contains references to objects in Fruits List. Bananas in Fruits List are placed one after another. Furthermore they have ascending numbers. (Adding and deleting bananas should preserve these properties) Problem is that after deserialization Bananas List and Fruits List in Basket seems to contain different objects. Is there way to avoid it ?
My second question is about property ContainedBy in Banana. Cos Bananas are aware where they are they point at specific container but again after deserialization they are pointing god know where (to be specific to other basket than they are contained in). Where is the catch?
[ProtoContract]
[ProtoInclude(500, typeof(Basket))]
public interface IContainer
{
[ProtoMember(1, OverwriteList = true)]
public List<Banana> Bananas { get; set; }
[ProtoMember(2, OverwriteList = true)]
public List<IFruit> Fruits { get; set; }
}
[ProtoContract]
public class Basket : IContainer
{
[ProtoMember(1, OverwriteList = true)]
public List<Banana> Bananas { get; set; }
[ProtoMember(2, OverwriteList = true)]
public List<IFruit> Fruits { get; set; }
public void AddBanana()
{
var number = Bananas.Count;
var newBanana = new Banana(number) {ContainedBy = this};
var lastBanana = Bananas[Bananas.Count - 1];
var index = Fruits.LastIndexOf(lastBanana);
Friuts.Insert(index + 1, newBanana);
Bananas.Add(newBanana);
}
public void DeleteBanana(Banana banana)
{
Bananas.Remove(banana);
Fruits.Remove(banana);
var n = 0;
foreach (var b in Bananas)
{
b.Number = n++;
}
}
}
[ProtoContract]
[ProtoInclude(600, typeof(Banana))]
public interface IFruit
{
[ProtoMember(1, AsReference = true)]
IContainer ContainedBy { get; set; }
}
[ProtoContract]
public class Banana : IFruit
{
[ProtoMember(1)]
public int Number { get; set; }
[ProtoMember(2, AsReference = true)]
IContainer ContainedBy { get; set; }
}
Update #1 Answer given by Marc Gravell work very well for above problem. But my target feature is Dictionary of Containers and that gives an Exception: "A reference-tracked object changed reference during deserialization". Changes listed below are applied to Marc Gravell's answer.
[ProtoContract]
class RootObject
{
[ProtoMember(1, OverwriteList = true, AsReference = true)]
public Dictionary<string, IContainer> Dictionary { get; set; }
}
...
internal static class Program
{
private static void Main()
{
var basketA = new Basket();
basketA.AddBanana();
var basketB = new Basket();
basketB.AddBanana();
var root = new RootObject {Dictionary = new Dictionary<string, IContainer>()};
root.Dictionary.Add("A",basketA);
root.Dictionary.Add("B",basketB);
RootObject clone;
using (var file = File.Create("tmp.bin"))
{
Serializer.Serialize<RootObject>(file, root);
}
using (var file = File.OpenRead("tmp.bin"))
{
clone = Serializer.Deserialize<RootObject>(file);
}
foreach (var container in clone.Dictionary.Values) //Exception
{
Console.WriteLine(container.Bananas.Count == container.Fruits.Count); //true
Console.WriteLine(ReferenceEquals(
container.Bananas[0],
container.Fruits[0])); // true
Console.WriteLine(ReferenceEquals(
container.Fruits[0].ContainedBy,
container)); // false
}
}
}
Obviously changing Dictionary tag in RootObject from [ProtoMember(1, OverwriteList = true, AsReference = true)] to [ProtoMember(1, OverwriteList = true)] helps with exception but reference ContainedBy is lost.