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In a Dapper ORM application, I want to assign one object to another, or all data members at once. Like this:

public class TableA
{
    public int    UserId   { get; set; }
    public string ClientId { get; set; }
    // ... more fields ...

    public bool Query()
    {
        bool Ok = false;
        try{
            // Method A
            TableA Rec = QueryResultRecords.First(); 
            MyCopyRec(Rec, this);                        // ugly

            // Method B
            this = QueryResultRecords.First();           // avoids CopyRec, does not work

            Ok = true;
        }
        catch(Exception e){
            Ok = false;
        }
        return Ok;
    }
}

With Method A you can assign the object from .First() directly to a new object of class TableA, and need a custom method MyCopyRec to get the data in the data members of the same class.

However, with Method B you cannot assign the same object directly to this.

Or is there another way to do this?

8
  • Why not just make the method static and return TableA from Query? Also it is considered bad design to put the data access methods inside the models those methods are retrieving. "Separation of concerns" tells us that Query should be in a separate class. Oct 28, 2015 at 13:45
  • 1
    Maybe use AutoMapper? Oct 28, 2015 at 13:50
  • @ScottChamberlain That is surely an option, but my sample code is simplified. My question is if there is a simple Method B to write a class method that leaves the query result directly in the class data members.
    – Roland
    Oct 28, 2015 at 13:51
  • @DerreckDean Do you imply that there is no simple, builtin way in C# to do something like MethodB, and that that is the reason the AutoMapper tool is created?
    – Roland
    Oct 28, 2015 at 13:53
  • No, there's no way to copy all properties from one object to another that is built-in to .Net. You can write an extension that uses reflection to loop through and copy properties, which is basically what AutoMapper does. However, this begs the question: Does your object really have that many properties where it's a pain to write target.Property = source.Property for them? The overhead for reflection is much more than just putting your nose to the grindstone and typing up assignments. My $0.02. Oct 28, 2015 at 13:56

2 Answers 2

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You cannot assign a object to "this" if "this" is a reference type, e.g. a class. "this" is a pointer to the current class instance. This would only work if this is a value type, e.g. a struct.

You can only assign values to properties of "this" (which is what probably happens in the (CopyRec method), like:

var result = QueryResultRecords.First();
this.UserId  = result.UserId;
1
  • You must be right, but I was thinking of my Class as a struct. Of course a class can have data members AND methods, but assigning something to a method has no meaning. So it is too bad I cannot assign the DATA values of an object to this. Is this a missing feature of C#, for which DataMapper is a repair?
    – Roland
    Oct 28, 2015 at 13:59
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/// <summary>
/// Extension for 'Object' that copies the properties to a destination object.
/// </summary>
/// <param name="source">The source.</param>
/// <param name="destination">The destination.</param>
public static void CopyProperties(this object source, object destination)
{
    // If any this null throw an exception
    if (source == null || destination == null)
        throw new ArgumentException("Source or/and Destination Objects are null");
    // Getting the Types of the objects
    Type typeDest = destination.GetType();
    Type typeSrc = source.GetType();

    // Iterate the Properties of the source instance and  
    // populate them from their desination counterparts  
    PropertyInfo[] srcProps = typeSrc.GetProperties();
    foreach (PropertyInfo srcProp in srcProps)
    {
        if (!srcProp.CanRead)
        {
            continue;
        }
        PropertyInfo targetProperty = typeDest.GetProperty(srcProp.Name);
        if (targetProperty == null)
        {
            continue;
        }
        if (!targetProperty.CanWrite)
        {
            continue;
        }
        if ((targetProperty.GetSetMethod().Attributes & MethodAttributes.Static) != 0)
        {
            continue;
        }
        if (!targetProperty.PropertyType.IsAssignableFrom(srcProp.PropertyType))
        {
            continue;
        }
        // Passed all tests, lets set the value
        targetProperty.SetValue(destination, srcProp.GetValue(source, null), null);
    }
}

Here's that method I talked about in the comments above.

Also refer to this link: Apply properties values from one object to another of the same type automatically?

1
  • Thank you for your code sample, I will surely study it. For now, I am convinced that C# is missing a feature of assigning to this, and it is more like the spirit of C# to go with a kind of separate Service class like in stackoverflow.com/a/18285160/1845672 which is the reason I accepted the other answer here.
    – Roland
    Oct 29, 2015 at 9:23

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