90

How do I create a custom app.config section that is just a simple list of add elements?

I have found a few examples (e.g. How to create custom config section in app.config?) for custom sections that look like this:

<RegisterCompanies>
  <Companies>
    <Company name="Tata Motors" code="Tata"/>
    <Company name="Honda Motors" code="Honda"/>
  </Companies>
</RegisterCompanies>

But how do I avoid the extra collection element ("Companies") so that it looks the same as the appSettings and connectionStrings sections? In other words, I'd like:

<registerCompanies>
  <add name="Tata Motors" code="Tata"/>
  <add name="Honda Motors" code="Honda"/>
</registerCompanies>
1

4 Answers 4

120

Full example with code based on OP config file:

<configuration>
    <configSections>
        <section name="registerCompanies" 
                 type="My.MyConfigSection, My.Assembly" />
    </configSections>
    <registerCompanies>
        <add name="Tata Motors" code="Tata"/>
        <add name="Honda Motors" code="Honda"/>
    </registerCompanies>
</configuration>

Here is the sample code to implement a custom config section with collapsed collection

using System.Configuration;
namespace My {
public class MyConfigSection : ConfigurationSection {
    [ConfigurationProperty("", IsRequired = true, IsDefaultCollection = true)]
    public MyConfigInstanceCollection Instances {
        get { return (MyConfigInstanceCollection)this[""]; }
        set { this[""] = value; }
    }
}
public class MyConfigInstanceCollection : ConfigurationElementCollection {
    protected override ConfigurationElement CreateNewElement() {
        return new MyConfigInstanceElement();
    }

    protected override object GetElementKey(ConfigurationElement element) {
        //set to whatever Element Property you want to use for a key
        return ((MyConfigInstanceElement)element).Name;
    }
}

public class MyConfigInstanceElement : ConfigurationElement {
    //Make sure to set IsKey=true for property exposed as the GetElementKey above
    [ConfigurationProperty("name", IsKey = true, IsRequired = true)]
    public string Name {
        get { return (string) base["name"]; }
        set { base["name"] = value; }
    }

    [ConfigurationProperty("code", IsRequired = true)]
    public string Code {
        get { return (string) base["code"]; }
        set { base["code"] = value; }
    } } }

Here is an example of how to access the configuration information from code.

var config = ConfigurationManager.GetSection("registerCompanies") 
                 as MyConfigSection;

Console.WriteLine(config["Tata Motors"].Code);
foreach (var e in config.Instances) { 
   Console.WriteLine("Name: {0}, Code: {1}", e.Name, e.Code); 
}
10
  • @Jay Walker how do you go about accessing the item that you need, ie :- config.Instances["Tata Motors"] is it possible to do this?
    – Simon
    May 27, 2014 at 12:50
  • 2
    Should point out the <configSection> should be right after <configuration> tag for it to work! Dec 25, 2014 at 23:01
  • 3
    Should also point out that <add is required. Creating you own custom <tag doesn't work with this answer Jul 9, 2015 at 15:19
  • 9
    AFAIK - this code "config["Tata Motors"]" will not compile b/c the indexer of config is protected internal. you will have to find a way to enumerate the items in the collection on your own.
    – CedricB
    Nov 3, 2015 at 17:37
  • 2
    @JayWalker all good. The "My.MyConfiguration, My.Assembly" in your example for the section type throw me. I just had to use "MyAssembly.MyConfiguration, MyAssembly" for what I was attempting.
    – Glen
    Jun 26, 2017 at 2:03
43

No custom configuration section necessary.

app.config

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<configuration>
  <configSections>
    <section name="YourAppSettings" type="System.Configuration.AppSettingsSection, System.Configuration, Version=2.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b03f5f7f11d50a3a" />
  </configSections>
  <!-- value attribute is optional. omit if you just want a list of 'keys' -->
  <YourAppSettings>
    <add key="one" value="1" />
    <add key="two" value="2"/>
    <add key="three" value="3"/>
    <add key="duplicate" value="aa"/>
    <add key="duplicate" value="bb"/>
  </YourAppSettings>
</configuration>

Retrieve values

// AppSettingsSection can be cast to a NameValueCollection
NameValueCollection settingCollection = 
(NameValueCollection)ConfigurationManager.GetSection("YourAppSettings");

// An array of the keys. No Duplicates
// { "one", "two", "three", "duplicate" }
string[] allKeys = settingCollection.AllKeys; 
    
// key/value pairs
// one : 1
// two : 2
// three : 3
// duplicate : bb 
foreach (string key in allKeys)
{
   Console.WriteLine(key + " : " + settingCollection[key]);
}

// Duplicates behavior
var items = settingCollection.Count;
Debug.Assert(items == 4); // no duplicates. Last element wins.
Debug.Assert(settingCollection["duplicate"] == "bb");
7
  • 1
    I guess it doesn't strictly answer the OP's question, but I think it's a valid solution, and a much simpler one. At the very least it helped me!
    – styl0r
    Jul 12, 2016 at 18:10
  • 2
    @styl0r you're right. it doesn't strictly answer it. If you have to use the attributes name/code instead of my solution key/value, you'd have to use a truly custom section. However, I assume you're in control of the config file, and have better things to do than make a custom class.
    – JJS
    Jul 13, 2016 at 16:02
  • 4
    Very simple and clean! No need for any additional custom section/element bloatware.
    – Ondřej
    Aug 20, 2018 at 7:49
  • 2
    You can also update to Version=4.0.0.0 if you'd like by just changing the version number. This is the best answer imo if you just need additional simple lists. The same can be done for "System.Configuration.ConnectionStringsSection" as well, though duplicates are handled slightly differently than app settings.
    – Sharpiro
    Mar 18, 2019 at 14:03
  • @Sharpiro were you having issues with the assembly version? I thought the assembly binding would have been in-pace, even for newer versions of the framework.
    – JJS
    Mar 19, 2019 at 16:02
22

Based on Jay Walker's answer above, this is a complete working example that adds the ability to do the indexing:

<configuration>
    <configSections>
        <section name="registerCompanies" 
                 type="My.MyConfigSection, My.Assembly" />
    </configSections>
    <registerCompanies>
        <add name="Tata Motors" code="Tata"/>
        <add name="Honda Motors" code="Honda"/>
    </registerCompanies>
</configuration>

Here is the sample code to implement a custom config section with collapsed collection

using System.Configuration;
using System.Linq;
namespace My
{
   public class MyConfigSection : ConfigurationSection
   {
      [ConfigurationProperty("", IsRequired = true, IsDefaultCollection = true)]
      public MyConfigInstanceCollection Instances
      {
         get { return (MyConfigInstanceCollection)this[""]; }
         set { this[""] = value; }
      }
   }
   public class MyConfigInstanceCollection : ConfigurationElementCollection
   {
      protected override ConfigurationElement CreateNewElement()
      {
         return new MyConfigInstanceElement();
      }

      protected override object GetElementKey(ConfigurationElement element)
      {
         //set to whatever Element Property you want to use for a key
         return ((MyConfigInstanceElement)element).Name;
      }

      public new MyConfigInstanceElement this[string elementName]
      {
         get
         {
            return this.OfType<MyConfigInstanceElement>().FirstOrDefault(item => item.Name == elementName);
         }
      }
   }

   public class MyConfigInstanceElement : ConfigurationElement
   {
      //Make sure to set IsKey=true for property exposed as the GetElementKey above
      [ConfigurationProperty("name", IsKey = true, IsRequired = true)]
      public string Name
      {
         get { return (string)base["name"]; }
         set { base["name"] = value; }
      }

      [ConfigurationProperty("code", IsRequired = true)]
      public string Code
      {
         get { return (string)base["code"]; }
         set { base["code"] = value; }
      }
   }
}

Here is an example of how to access the configuration information from code.

MyConfigSection config = 
   ConfigurationManager.GetSection("registerCompanies") as MyConfigSection;

Console.WriteLine(config.Instances["Honda Motors"].Code);
foreach (MyConfigInstanceElement e in config.Instances)
{
   Console.WriteLine("Name: {0}, Code: {1}", e.Name, e.Code);
}
2
  • 2
    This is great. Now we just need example code for updating, adding, and deleting an Instance. May 7, 2018 at 15:49
  • 2
    Thanks for your solution! Whoever made this at MS...this really is needlessly complicated.
    – Switch386
    Sep 11, 2019 at 1:30
8

Based on the answer by Jay Walker, accessing the elements needs to be done by iterating through the "Instances" collection. ie.

var config = ConfigurationManager.GetSection("registerCompanies") 
                 as MyConfigSection;

foreach (MyConfigInstanceElement e in config.Instances) { 
   Console.WriteLine("Name: {0}, Code: {1}", e.Name, e.Code); 
}

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