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I'm developing a API that uses lambda expressions to specify properties. I'm using this famous piece of code similar to this one (this is simplified and incomplete, just to make clear what I'm talking about):

public void Foo<T, P>(Expression<Func<T, P>> action)
{
    var expression = (MemberExpression)action.Body;
    string propertyName = expression.Member.Name;
    // ...
}

To be called like this:

Foo((String x) => x.Length);

Now I would like to specify a property path by chaining property names, like this:

Foo((MyClass x) => x.Name.Length);

Foo should be able to split the path into its property names ("Name" and "Length"). Is there a way to do this with reasonable effort?


There is a somehow similar looking question, but I think they are trying to combine lambda expressions there.

Another question also is dealing with nested property names, but I don't really understand what they are talking about.

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2 Answers

up vote 10 down vote accepted

Something like this?

public void Foo<T, P>(Expression<Func<T, P>> expr)
{
    MemberExpression me;
    switch (expr.Body.NodeType)
    {
        case ExpressionType.Convert:
        case ExpressionType.ConvertChecked:
            var ue = expr.Body as UnaryExpression;
            me = ((ue != null) ? ue.Operand : null) as MemberExpression;
            break;
        default:
            me = expr.Body as MemberExpression;
            break;
    }

    while (me != null)
    {
        string propertyName = me.Member.Name;
        Type propertyType = me.Type;

        Console.WriteLine(propertyName + ": " + propertyType);

        me = me.Expression as MemberExpression;
    }
}
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1  
Wow, this works, and it is quite simple. Thanks a lot! – Stefan Steinegger Nov 3 '09 at 15:29
1  
@StefanSteinegger Old question, I know... but if it's only the names you need, expr.ToString().Split('.').Skip(1) would be even simpler :) – asgerhallas Dec 19 '12 at 12:47
2  
@asgerhallas: you may add another answer. – Stefan Steinegger Jan 8 at 9:18

Old question, I know... but if it's only the names you need, an even simpler way to do it is:

expr.ToString().Split('.').Skip(1) 
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