If you can make your properties virtual, you can use an interceptor with Castle Dynamic Proxy.
An interceptor contains behavior that can execute when you call a given method. In this case we ModifyStringMethod to the return value of a string property.
How:
1) Add reference to nuget package Castle.Core
2) Define your interceptor
public class ModifyStringMethodInterceptor : IInterceptor
{
public void Intercept(IInvocation invocation)
{
invocation.Proceed();
if (invocation.Method.Name.StartsWith("get_") &&
invocation.Method.ReturnType == typeof(string))
{
invocation.ReturnValue =
ModifyStringMethod((string)invocation.ReturnValue);
}
}
private static string ModifyStringMethod(string input)
{
return (input ?? "") + "MODIFIED";
}
}
The example above has an Intercept method that will be called when your property is called. You can see in the example invocation.Proceed() this continues the call to the property.
Then it checks to see if its a get_ property and returns a string
if (invocation.Method.Name.StartsWith("get_") &&
invocation.Method.ReturnType == typeof(string))
Then modifies the return value of the method.
invocation.ReturnValue = ModifyStringMethod((string)invocation.ReturnValue);
3) Define your objects you want to add this behavior to with a virtual method (notice I can also use auto implemented properties here) BONUS
public class Intercepted
{
public virtual string A { get; set; }
}
4) Then create instances of object using the ProxyGenerator class in DynamicProxy,
e.g
public class Program
{
static void Main(string[] args)
{
var pg = new ProxyGenerator();
// Intercepted will be an instance of Intercepted class with the
// ModifyStringMethodInterceptor applied to it
var intercepted = pg.CreateClassProxy<Intercepted>(new ModifyStringMethodInterceptor());
intercepted.A = "Set ... ";
Console.WriteLine(intercepted.A);
Console.ReadLine();
}
}
Output is
Set ... MODIFIED
The benefit here is your objects are "clean" e.g they don't need to know about the ModifyStringMethodInterceptor and can contain auto implemented properties, which if you have plenty of these objects will reduce the amount of code by large amount.
Going one step further if you needed further control you could apply this behavior by adding an attribute to the class, e.g
[AttributeUsage(AttributeTargets.Method)]
public class ModifyStringMethodAttribute : Attribute
{
}
Then the objects are defined as:
public class Intercepted
{
public virtual string A { [ModifyStringMethod] get; set; }
}
And a change to the interceptor:
if (invocation.Method.ReturnType == typeof(string) &&
invocation.Method.GetCustomAttributes(true)
.OfType<ModifyStringMethodAttribute>().Any())
{
invocation.ReturnValue =
ModifyStringMethod((string)invocation.ReturnValue);
}
To check for the attribute, and to then apply the method call.
GetPropertyValue(string propertyName)
MyClass
has read/write properties whileMyClassFacade
has readonly properties that exposeMyClass
properties modified for display.