36

I want to load an assembly (its name is stored in a string), use reflection to check if it has a method called "CustomType MyMethod(byte[] a, int b)" and call it or throw an exception otherwise. I guess I should do something like this, but would appreciate if someone could offer same advice on how best to do it:

Assembly asm = Assembly.Load("myAssembly"); /* 1. does it matter if write myAssembly or myAssembly.dll? */

Type t = asm.GetType("myAssembly.ClassName");

// specify parameters
byte[] a = GetParamA();
int b = GetParamB();

object[] params = new object[2];
params[0] = a;
params[1] = b;

/* 2. invoke method MyMethod() which returns object "CustomType" - how do I check if it exists? */
/* 3. what's the meaning of 4th parameter (t in this case); MSDN says this is "the Object on which to invoke the specified member", but isn't this already accounted for by using t.InvokeMember()? */
CustomType result = t.InvokeMember("MyMethod", BindingFlags.InvokeMethod, null, t, params);

Is this good enough, or are there better/faster/shorter ways? What about constructors, given that these methods are not static - can they simply be ignored?

When invoking void Methods(), is it ok to just write t.InvokeMember(...) or should you always do Object obj = t.InvokeMember(...)?

Thanks in advance.


EDIT I have provided a working example as a separate answer below.

3
  • 1
    Fourth parameter is the instance. Type t is the type, the class. You need to instantiate it first.
    – Wilbert
    Jan 23, 2013 at 11:58
  • You should put your answer as an answer, not an edit to the question. It's clearer for future readers and allows your answer to be rated so other people can see how good it is.
    – danio
    Jul 3, 2014 at 8:24
  • 1
    @danio you're right, I pretty much forgot about this one. Done.
    – w128
    Jul 3, 2014 at 8:28

4 Answers 4

38

Since this seems to be a popular question, here's the complete source code example on how to do it.

Suppose we have a sample assembly, MyAssembly.dll, with a class MyClass. We wish to dynamically load it and invoke its methods. MyAssembly code:

namespace MyAssembly
{
    public class MyClass
    {
        public int X { get; set; }
        public int Y { get; set; }

        public MyClass(int initialX, int initialY)
        {
            X = initialX;
            Y = initialY;
        }

        public int MyMethod(int count, string text)
        {
            Console.WriteLine("This is a normal method.");
            Console.WriteLine("Count: {0}", count);
            Console.WriteLine("Text: {0}", text);

            return this.X + this.Y;
        }

        public static void StaticMethod(int count, float radius)
        {
            Console.WriteLine("This is a static method call.");
            Console.WriteLine("Count: {0}", count);
            Console.WriteLine("Radius: {0}", radius);
        }
    }
}

First, we would like to create an instance of the class using the constructor MyClass(int initialX, int initialY), then call the method public int MyMethod(int count, string text). Here's how you do it from another project (e.g. a console application):

static void Main(string[] args)
{
    //
    // 1. Load assembly "MyAssembly.dll" from file path. Specify that we will be using class MyAssembly.MyClass
    //
    Assembly asm = Assembly.LoadFrom(@"C:\Path\MyAssembly.dll");
    Type t = asm.GetType("MyAssembly.MyClass");

    //
    // 2. We will be invoking a method: 'public int MyMethod(int count, string text)'
    //
    var methodInfo = t.GetMethod("MyMethod", new Type[] { typeof(int), typeof(string) });
    if (methodInfo == null)
    {
        // never throw generic Exception - replace this with some other exception type
        throw new Exception("No such method exists.");
    }

    //
    // 3. Define parameters for class constructor 'MyClass(int initialX, int initialY)'
    //
    object[] constructorParameters = new object[2];
    constructorParameters[0] = 999; // First parameter.
    constructorParameters[1] = 2;   // Second parameter.

    //
    // 4. Create instance of MyClass.
    //
    var o = Activator.CreateInstance(t, constructorParameters);

    //
    // 5. Specify parameters for the method we will be invoking: 'int MyMethod(int count, string text)'
    //
    object[] parameters = new object[2];
    parameters[0] = 124;            // 'count' parameter
    parameters[1] = "Some text.";   // 'text' parameter

    //
    // 6. Invoke method 'int MyMethod(int count, string text)'
    //
    var r = methodInfo.Invoke(o, parameters);
    Console.WriteLine(r);
}

Calling the static method public static void StaticMethod(int count, float radius) looks like this:

var methodInfoStatic = t.GetMethod("StaticMethod");
if (methodInfoStatic == null)
{
    // never throw generic Exception - replace this with some other exception type
    throw new Exception("No such static method exists.");
}

// Specify parameters for static method: 'public static void MyMethod(int count, float radius)'
object[] staticParameters = new object[2];
staticParameters[0] = 10;
staticParameters[1] = 3.14159f;

// Invoke static method
methodInfoStatic.Invoke(o, staticParameters);
3
  • In your static method example, where's the o coming from? methodInfoStatic.Invoke(o, staticParameters);
    – minseong
    Oct 29, 2016 at 15:28
  • 2
    @minseong it's been some time since I wrote that, but IIRC o is the same as in the example above, but since this is a static method, if I'm not mistaken you can simply pass null instead of o.
    – w128
    Oct 29, 2016 at 17:33
  • On this line in section 1: Type t = asm.GetType("MyAssembly.MyClass") "MyAssembly" needs to come from Root namespace property of the project rather than from Assembly name property, which in my project were different (typically they're the same because they default to the same value, so you wouldn't normally have a problem).
    – jbobbins
    Sep 6, 2019 at 14:26
18

use reflection to check if it has a method called "CustomType MyMethod(byte[] a, int b)" and call it or throw an exception otherwise

Your current code isn't fulfilling that requirement. But you can pretty easily with something like this:

var methodInfo = t.GetMethod("MyMethod", new Type[] { typeof(byte[]), typeof(int) });
if (methodInfo == null) // the method doesn't exist
{
    // throw some exception
}

var o = Activator.CreateInstance(t);

var result = methodInfo.Invoke(o, params);

Is this good enough, or are there better/faster/shorter ways?

As far as I'm concerned this is the best way and there isn't really anything faster per say.

What about constructors, given that these methods are not static - can they simply be ignored?

You are still going to have to create an instance of t as shown in my example. This will use the default constructor with no arguments. If you need to pass arguments you can, just see the MSDN documentation and modify it as such.

0
6
Assembly assembly = Assembly.LoadFile("myAssembly");
        Type type = assembly.GetType("myAssembly.ClassName");
        if (type != null)
        {
            MethodInfo methodInfo = type.GetMethod("MyMethod");
            if (methodInfo != null)
            {
                object result = null;
                ParameterInfo[] parameters = methodInfo.GetParameters();
                object classInstance = Activator.CreateInstance(type, null);
                if (parameters.Length == 0)
                {
                    //This works fine
                    result = methodInfo.Invoke(classInstance, null);
                }
                else
                {
                    object[] parametersArray = new object[] { "Hello" };

                    //The invoke does NOT work it throws "Object does not match target type"             
                    result = methodInfo.Invoke(classInstance, parametersArray);
                }
            }
        }
3

You can use dynamic type whose will be resolved in runtime.

Type type = Type.GetType(className, true);
dynamic instance = Activator.CreateInstance(type);
var response = instance.YourMethod();
3
  • 1
    How can this be used when type is a static class?
    – Ozzah
    Feb 19, 2015 at 3:23
  • 1
    You can´t instance a static class, but you can invoke one of its methods.
    – andre
    Feb 19, 2015 at 16:03
  • 1
    Look at: Activator and static classes
    – andre
    Feb 19, 2015 at 16:11

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