show/hide this revision's text 2 added 486 characters in body

EDIT:

Scratch that, this still applies, but I think what your doing is reading a configuration file and parsing it into this:

List<List<KeyValuePair<String,String>>> itemConfig = 
    new List<List<KeyValuePair<String,String>>>();

In this case, we can still use a reflection factory to instantiate the objects, I'd just pass in the nested inner list to it, instead of passing each individual key/value pair.

OLD POST:

Here is a clever little way to do this using reflection:

The basic idea:

  • Use a common base class for each Object class.
  • Put all of these classes in their own assembly.
  • Put this factory in that assembly too.
  • Pass in the KeyValuePair that you read from your config, and in return it finds the class that matches KV.Key and instantiates it with KV.Value
   
      public class KeyValueToObjectFactory
      { 
         private Dictionary _kvTypes = new Dictionary();

        public KeyValueToObjectFactory()
        {
            // Preload the Types into a dictionary so we can look them up later
            // Obviously, you want to reuse the factory to minimize overhead, so don't
            // do something stupid like instantiate a new factory in a loop.

            foreach (Type type in typeof(KeyValueToObjectFactory).Assembly.GetTypes())
            {
                if (type.IsSubclassOf(typeof(KVObjectBase)))
                {
                    _kvTypes[type.Name.ToLower()] = type;
                }
            }
        }

        public KVObjectBase CreateObjectFromKV(KeyValuePair kv)
        {
            if (kv != null)
            {
                string kvName = kv.Key;

                // If the Type information is in our Dictionary, instantiate a new instance of that class.
                Type kvType;
                if (_kvTypes.TryGetValue(kvName, out kvType))
                {
                    return (KVObjectBase)Activator.CreateInstance(kvType, kv.Value);
                }
                else
                {
                    throw new ArgumentException("Unrecognized KV Pair");
                }
            }
            else
            {
                return null;
            }
        }
    }
show/hide this revision's text 1

Here is a clever little way to do this using reflection:

The basic idea:

  • Use a common base class for each Object class.
  • Put all of these classes in their own assembly.
  • Put this factory in that assembly too.
  • Pass in the KeyValuePair that you read from your config, and in return it finds the class that matches KV.Key and instantiates it with KV.Value
   
      public class KeyValueToObjectFactory
      { 
         private Dictionary _kvTypes = new Dictionary();

        public KeyValueToObjectFactory()
        {
            // Preload the Types into a dictionary so we can look them up later
            // Obviously, you want to reuse the factory to minimize overhead, so don't
            // do something stupid like instantiate a new factory in a loop.

            foreach (Type type in typeof(KeyValueToObjectFactory).Assembly.GetTypes())
            {
                if (type.IsSubclassOf(typeof(KVObjectBase)))
                {
                    _kvTypes[type.Name.ToLower()] = type;
                }
            }
        }

        public KVObjectBase CreateObjectFromKV(KeyValuePair kv)
        {
            if (kv != null)
            {
                string kvName = kv.Key;

                // If the Type information is in our Dictionary, instantiate a new instance of that class.
                Type kvType;
                if (_kvTypes.TryGetValue(kvName, out kvType))
                {
                    return (KVObjectBase)Activator.CreateInstance(kvType, kv.Value);
                }
                else
                {
                    throw new ArgumentException("Unrecognized KV Pair");
                }
            }
            else
            {
                return null;
            }
        }
    }