Making a lot of unwarranted assumptions, I think that the best approach would be to create a Factory that will receive the list of key value pairs and return the proper object or throw an exception if it's invalid (or create a dummy object, or whatever is better in the particular case).
private class Factory {
public static IConfigurationObject Factory(List<string> keyValuePair) {
switch (keyValuePair[0]) {
case "x":
return new x(keyValuePair[1]);
break;
/* etc. */
default:
throw new ArgumentException("Wrong parameter in the file");
}
}
}
The strongest assumption here is that all your objects can be treated partly like the same (ie, they implement the same interface (IConfigurationObject in the example) or belong to the same inheritance tree).
If they don't, then it depends on your program flow and what are you doing with them. But nonetheless, they should :)
EDIT: Given your explanation, you could have one Factory per file type, the switch in it would be the authoritative source on the allowed types per file type and they probably share something in common. Reflection is a possible, but it's riskier because it's less obvious and self documenting than this one.
