I want to serialize a pretty ordinary class, but the catch is it's nested in a static class like this:

public static class StaticClass
{
    [Serializable]
    public class SomeType
    {
        ...
    }
}

This code:

StaticClass.SomeType obj = new StaticClass.SomeType();
XmlSerializer mySerializer = new XmlSerializer(typeof(obj));

Produces this error:

StaticClass.SomeType cannot be serialized. Static types cannot be used as parameters or return types.

That error seems completely irrelevant; StaticClass.SomeType is not a static type.

Is there a way around this? Am I wrong to think this error is dumb?

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6  
btw, [Serializable] doesn't add anything here - XmlSerializer doesn't use it. – Marc Gravell Dec 18 '10 at 19:55
looks like a bug... – Thomas Levesque Dec 18 '10 at 19:56
2  
It has already been reported on Connect: connect.microsoft.com/VisualStudio/feedback/details/523204/… – Thomas Levesque Dec 18 '10 at 19:59
feedback

3 Answers

up vote 3 down vote accepted

As a pragmatic workaround - don't mark the nesting type static:

public class ContainerClass
{
    private ContainerClass() { // hide the public ctor
        throw new InvalidOperationException("no you don't");
    }

    public class SomeType
    {
        ...
    }
}
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as a workaround to the XmlSerializer limitation, this is the most practical for me. thanks :) – tenfour Dec 18 '10 at 20:12
+1 simple and effective. If I was going to do this I'd also marked the class as sealed. Reminds me of the old .NET 1 days (sealed class and private constructor) – RichardOD Dec 18 '10 at 20:17
feedback

It's know limitation in XmlSerializer ()

And workaround is to use DataContractSerializer (DataContractAttribute + DataMemberAttribute)

var ser = new DataContractSerializer(typeof (StaticClass.SomeType));
var obj = new StaticClass.SomeType {Int = 2};
ser.WriteObject(stream, obj);

...

static class StaticClass
{
    [DataContract]
    public class SomeType
    {
        [DataMember]
        public int Int { get; set; }
    }
}

As you can see DataContractSerializer doesn't even require StaticClass to be public. One difference is that you should use WriteObject' andReadObject' instead Serialize and Deserialize

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feedback

Either make the class non nested or consider using the DataContractSerializer instead.

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