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This is really stumping me today. I'm sure its not that hard, but I have a System.Reflection.PropertyInfo object. I want to set its value based on the result of a database lookup (think ORM, mapping a column back to a property).

My problem is if the DB returned value is DBNull, I just want to set the property value to its default, the same as calling:

value = default(T);  // where T is the type of the property.

However, the default() method won't compile if you give it a Type, which is what I have:

object myObj = ???; // doesn't really matter. some arbitrary class.
PropertyInfo myPropInf = ???; // the reflection data for a property on the myObj object.
myPropInf.SetValue(myObj, default(myPropInf.PropertyType), null);

The above doesn't compile. default(Type) is invalid. I also thought about doing:

object myObj = ???;
PropertyInfo myPropInf = ???;
myPropInf.SetValue(myObj, Activator.CreateInstance(myPropInf.PropertyType), null);

However, if the Type is string, that would assign the value "new String()", but I really want "null", which is what "default(string)" would return.

So what am I missing here? I suppose a really hacky way would be to create a new instance of myObj's Type and copy the property over, but that just seems stupid...

object myObj = ???;
PropertyInfo  myPropInf = ???;
var blank = Activator.CreateInstance(myObj.GetType());
object defaultValue = myPropInf.GetValue(blank, null);
myPropInf.SetValue(myObj, defaultValue, null);

I'd rather not waste the memory to make a whole new instance, just to get the default for the property though. Seems very wasteful.

Any ideas?

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The type's default, or the property's default? They aren't necessarily the same... – Marc Gravell Jan 3 '09 at 10:39

3 Answers

vote up 3 vote down check

I believe if you just do

prop.SetValue(obj,null,null);

If it's a valuetype, it'll set it to the default value, if it's a reference type, it'll set it to null.

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wow, that does work! learn something every day :) Thanks! – rally25rs Jan 2 '09 at 17:39
That sets it to the zero value for the type, not the property's default. See my answer for more. – Marc Gravell Jan 3 '09 at 10:38
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object defaultValue = type.IsValueType ? Activator.CreateInstance(type) : null;
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thanks for the info. Could you shed any light on my question? I've referenced and linked to your comment. cheers. My question is question ID: 1046928/working-with-an-unknown-number-of-unknown-types-net – andy Jun 26 at 3:00
vote up 2 vote down

The "null" trick will set it to the zero value for the type, which is not necessarily the same as the default for the property. Firstly, if it is a new object, why not just leave it alone? Alternatively, use TypeDescriptor:

PropertyDescriptor prop = TypeDescriptor.GetProperties(foo)["Bar"];
if (prop.CanResetValue(foo)) prop.ResetValue(foo);

This respects both [DefaultValue] and the Reset{name}() patterns (as used by binding and serialization), making it very versatile and re-usable.

If you are doing lots of this, you can also get a performance boost using TypeDescriptor instead of reflection, by re-using the PropertyDescriptorCollection and using HyperDescriptor (same code, but much faster than either refletion or raw TypeDescriptor).

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