3

Here's what I want the resulting class declaration to look like:

public sealed partial class Refund : DataObjectBase<Refund>
 {
}

}

This code (snipped):

targetClass = new CodeTypeDeclaration(className);
            targetClass.IsClass = true;
            targetClass.TypeAttributes =
                TypeAttributes.Public | TypeAttributes.Sealed;
            targetClass.IsPartial = true; //partial so that genn'ed code can be safely modified
            targetClass.TypeParameters.Add(new CodeTypeParameter{ Name=className});
            targetClass.BaseTypes.Add(new CodeTypeReference { BaseType = "DataObjectBase", Options = CodeTypeReferenceOptions.GenericTypeParameter });

Produces this class declaration:

public sealed partial class Refund<Refund> : DataObjectBase
 {
}

What am I doing wrong?

2 Answers 2

2

I think that the following string for the BaseType should do the trick (untested):

"DataObjectBase`1[[Refund]]"

It may be possible that you need to provide a fully-qualified name for Refund, at least including the assembly name:

"DataObjectBase`1[[Refund, RefundAssembly]]"

And you should then remove the line targetClass.TypeParameters.Add(...).

1
  • 2
    The correct line ended up being targetClass.BaseTypes.Add(new CodeTypeReference { BaseType = "DataObjectBase`1[Refund]", Options = CodeTypeReferenceOptions.GenericTypeParameter }); Aug 28, 2009 at 19:23
1

If you use Expressions to CodeDOM it could be

var cls = Define.Class("Refund", 
   TypeAttributes.Public | TypeAttributes.Sealed, true)
   .Inherits(CodeDom.TypeRef("DataObjectBase","Refund"))

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