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I have a class with a nullable int? datatype set to serialize as an xml element. Is there any way to set it up so the xml serialializer will not serialize the element if the value is null?

I've tried to add the [System.Xml.Serialization.XmlElement(IsNullable=false)] attribute, but I get a runtime serialization exception saying there was a an error reflecting the type, because "IsNullable may not be set to 'false' for a Nullable type. Consider using 'System.Int32' type or removing the IsNullable property from the XmlElement attribute."

[Serializable]
[System.Xml.Serialization.XmlRoot("Score", Namespace = "http://mycomp.com/test/score/v1")]
public class Score
{
    private int? iID_m;
    ...

    /// <summary>
    /// 
    /// </summary>        
    public int? ID 
    { 
        get 
        { 
            return iID_m; 
        } 
        set 
        { 
            iID_m = value; 
        } 
    }
     ...
}

The above class will serailize to:

<Score xmlns="http://mycomp.com/test/score/v1">
    <ID xsi:nil="true" />
</Score>

But for IDs that are null I don't want the ID element at all, primarily because when I use OPENXML in MSSQL, it returns a 0 instead of null for an element that looks like

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5 Answers

vote up 9 vote down check

XmlSerializer supports the ShouldSerialize{Foo}() pattern, so you can add a method:

public bool ShouldSerializeID() {return ID.HasValue;}

There is also the {Foo}Specified pattern - not sure if XmlSerializer supports that one.

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1  
XmlSerializer also supports the [Foo}Specified pattern. – David Schmitt Mar 4 at 13:47
vote up 3 vote down

Unfortunately, the behaviours you describe are accurately documented as such in the docs for XmlElementAttribute.IsNullable.

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vote up 4 vote down

I figured out a workaround utilizing two properties. An int? property with an XmlIgnore attribute and an object property which gets serialized.

    /// <summary>
    /// Score db record
    /// </summary>        
    [System.Xml.Serialization.XmlIgnore()]
    public int? ID 
    { 
        get 
        { 
            return iID_m; 
        } 
        set 
        { 
            iID_m = value; 
        } 
    }

    /// <summary>
    /// Score db record
    /// </summary>        
    [System.Xml.Serialization.XmlElement("ID",IsNullable = false)]
    public object IDValue
    {
        get
        {
            return ID;
        }
        set
        {
            if (value == null)
            {
                ID = null;
            }
            else if (value is int || value is int?)
            {
                ID = (int)value;
            }
            else
            {
                ID = int.Parse(value.ToString());
            }
        }
    }
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vote up 2 vote down

Wow thanks this question/answer really helped me out. I heart Stackoverflow.

I made what you are doing above a little more generic. All we're really looking for is to have Nullable with slightly different serialization behavior. I used Reflector to build my own Nullable, and added a few things here and there to make the XML serialization work the way we want. Seems to work pretty well:

public class Nullable<T>
{
    public Nullable(T value)
    {
        _value = value;
        _hasValue = true;
    }

    public Nullable()
    {
        _hasValue = false;
    }

    [XmlText]
    public T Value
    {
        get
        {
            if (!HasValue)
                throw new InvalidOperationException();
            return _value;
        }
        set
        {
            _value = value;
            _hasValue = true;
        }
    }

    [XmlIgnore]
    public bool HasValue
        { get { return _hasValue; } }

    public T GetValueOrDefault()
        { return _value; }
    public T GetValueOrDefault(T i_defaultValue)
        { return HasValue ? _value : i_defaultValue; }

    public static explicit operator T(Nullable<T> i_value)
        { return i_value.Value; }
    public static implicit operator Nullable<T>(T i_value)
        { return new Nullable<T>(i_value); }

    public override bool Equals(object i_other)
    {
        if (!HasValue)
            return (i_other == null);
        if (i_other == null)
            return false;
        return _value.Equals(i_other);
    }

    public override int GetHashCode()
    {
        if (!HasValue)
            return 0;
        return _value.GetHashCode();
    }

    public override string ToString()
    {
        if (!HasValue)
            return "";
        return _value.ToString();
    }

    bool _hasValue;
    T    _value;
}

You lose the ability to have your members as int? and so on (have to use Nullable<int> instead) but other than that all behavior stays the same.

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vote up 2 vote down

I'm using this micro-pattern to implement Nullable serialization:

[XmlIgnore]
public double? SomeValue { get; set; }

[XmlAttribute("SomeValue")] // or [XmlElement("SomeValue")]
[EditorBrowsable(EditorBrowsableState.Never)]
public double XmlSomeValue { get { return SomeValue.Value; } set { SomeValue= value; } }  
[EditorBrowsable(EditorBrowsableState.Never)]
public bool XmlSomeValueSpecified { get { return SomeValue.HasValue; } }

This provides the right interface to the user without compromise and still does the right thing when serializing.

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Since SomeValue may be null... public double XmlSomeValue { get { return SomeValue.HasValue? SomeValue.Value : 0; } set { SomeValue = value; } } – Doug D Jun 5 at 11:56
XmlSomeValue is only supposed to be used by the XmlSerializer who'll only touch it when XmlSomeValueSpecified is true (i.e. SomeValue.Value is not null. – David Schmitt Jun 5 at 12:02

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