show/hide this revision's text 2 Correct code

If you were are using C# 3.0, there is a way to get the name of the property dynamically, without hard coded it.

private void string GetPropertyName<TValue>(Expression<Func<BindingSourceType, TValue>> propertySelector)
{
    var memberExpression = propertySelector.Body as MemberExpression;
    if (memberExpression != null)
    {
        return memberExpression.Member.Name;
    }
    else
    {
       return string.empty;    
    }
}

Where BindingSourceType is the class name of your datasource object instance.

Then, you could use a lambda expression to select the property you want to bind, in a strongly typed manner :

this.textBox.DataBindings.Add(GetPropertyName(o => o.MyClassProperty),
                              this.myDataSourceObject,
                              "Text");

It will allow you to refactor your code safely, without braking all your databinding stuff. But using expression trees is the same as using reflection, in terms of performance.

The previous code is quite ugly and unchecked, but you get the idea.

show/hide this revision's text 1

If you were using C# 3.0, there is a way to get the name of the property dynamically, without hard coded it.

private void GetPropertyName<TValue>(Expression<Func<BindingSourceType, TValue>> propertySelector)
{
    var memberExpression = propertySelector.Body as MemberExpression;
    if (memberExpression != null)
    {
        return memberExpression.Member.Name;
    }
}

Where BindingSourceType is the class name of your datasource object instance.

Then, you could use a lambda expression to select the property you want to bind, in a strongly typed manner :

this.textBox.DataBindings.Add(GetPropertyName(o => o.MyClassProperty),
                              this.myDataSourceObject,
                              "Text");

It will allow you to refactor your code safely, without braking all your databinding stuff. But using expression trees is the same as using reflection, in terms of performance.