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I have the following method which serialises an object to a HTML tag. I only want to do this though if the type isn't Anonymous.

private void MergeTypeDataToTag(object typeData)
{
    if (typeData != null)
    {
        Type elementType = typeData.GetType();

        if (/* elementType != AnonymousType */)
        {
            _tag.Attributes.Add("class", elementType.Name);    
        }

        // do some more stuff
    }
}

Can somebody show me how to achieve this?

Thanks

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5 Answers

up vote 24 down vote accepted

From: http://www.liensberger.it/web/blog/?p=191

private static bool CheckIfAnonymousType(Type type)
{
    if (type == null)
        throw new ArgumentNullException("type");

    // HACK: The only way to detect anonymous types right now.
    return Attribute.IsDefined(type, typeof(CompilerGeneratedAttribute), false)
        && type.IsGenericType && type.Name.Contains("AnonymousType")
        && (type.Name.StartsWith("<>") || type.Name.StartsWith("VB$"))
        && (type.Attributes & TypeAttributes.NotPublic) == TypeAttributes.NotPublic;
}

HTH.

EDIT:
Another link with extension method: Determining whether a Type is an Anonymous Type

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1  
Sadly this is false for new{}.GetType() But i think && type.IsGenericType can savely be removed. – Lars Corneliussen Sep 14 '11 at 16:15
using this in my open source project: github.com/amirrajan/oak – Amir Oct 23 '11 at 19:45

Check for CompilerGeneratedAttribute and DebuggerDisplayAttribute.Type

here is the code generated by the compiler for an anomymous type

[CompilerGenerated, DebuggerDisplay(@"\{ a = {a} }", Type="<Anonymous Type>")]
internal sealed class <>f__AnonymousType0<<a>j__TPar>
{
...
}
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Quick and dirty:

if(obj.GetType().Name.Contains("AnonymousType"))
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Well, today compiier generates anonymous types as generic AND sealed classes. A paradoxal combination since specialization of a generic class is a kind of inheritance, isn't? So you can check for this: 1. Is this a generic type? Yes => 2) is its definition sealed && not public? Yes => 3) is its definition has CompilerGeneratedAttribute attribute? I guess, if these 3 criteria are true together, we have an anonymous type... Well... There is a problem with ANY of methods described - they are use aspects that may change in next versions of .NET and it will be so until Microsoft will add IsAnonymous boolean property to Type class. Hope it will happen before we all die... Until that day, it can be checked like so:

using System.Runtime.CompilerServices;
using System.Reflection;

public static class AnonymousTypesSupport
{
    public static bool IsAnonymous(this Type type)
    {
        if (type.IsGenericType)
        {
            var d = type.GetGenericTypeDefinition();
            if (d.IsClass && d.IsSealed && d.Attributes.HasFlag(TypeAttributes.NotPublic))
            {
                var attributes = d.GetCustomAttributes(typeof(CompilerGeneratedAttribute), false);
                if (attributes != null && attributes.Length > 0)
                {
                    //WOW! We have an anonymous type!!!
                    return true;
                }
            }
        }
        return false;
    }

    public static bool IsAnonymousType<T>(this T instance)
    {
        return IsAnonymous(instance.GetType());
    }
}
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You can just check if the namespace is null.

public static bool IsAnonymousType(this object instance)
{

    if (instance==null)
        return false;

    return instance.GetType().Namespace == null;
}
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does this work for mono? – albertjan 5 hours ago

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