5

I have the following method declaration:

public static bool SerializeObject<T>(string filename, T objectToSerialize){

I want to restrict T to types decorated with the [Serializable] attribute.

The following does not work because "Attribute 'System.SerializableAttribute' is not valid on this declaration type. It is valid on 'Class, Enum, Struct, Delegate' declarations only.":

public static bool SerializeObject<T>(string filename, [Serializable] T objectToSerialize)

I understand that AttributeUsageAttribute(AttributeTargets.Parameter) must be set for the Attribute in order to use the above and that the [Serializable] attribute does not have this set.

Is there a way to restrict T to types marked with the [Serializable] attribute?

1
  • Can you restrict on an interface? That seems like the natural way to do this. Mar 28, 2012 at 15:40

5 Answers 5

9

Is there a way to restrict T to types marked with the [Serializable] attribute?

No, there is not a way to do this using generic constraints. These contraints are clearly spelled out in the specification and this is not one of them.

However, you could write an extension method

public static bool IsTypeSerializable(this Type type) {
    Contract.Requires(type != null);
    return type.GetCustomAttributes(typeof(SerializableAttribute), true)
               .Any();
}

and say

Contract.Requires(typeof(T).IsTypeSerializable());

No, it's not the same thing, but it's the best that you can do. The constraints on generics are fairly limited.

Lastly, you could consider saying

where T : ISerializable

Again, not the same thing, but it's something to consider.

1

Unfortunately, no, you cannot create a generic constraint that checks attributes. The best you can do would be to implement the constraint at runtime:

if (!typeof(T).GetCustomAttributes(typeof(SerializableAttribute), true).Any())
{
    throw new ArgumentException();
}
1

You could simply throw a an exception so that the programmer knows it has to be Serializable.

like so:

public static bool SerializeObject<T>(string filename, T objectToSerialize)
{
    if(!typeof(objectToSerialize).IsSerializable)
    {
              throw new Exception("objectToSerialize is not serializable");
    }
}
0

No, there isn't. You can however restrict the type to implement ISerializable which isn't the same as a decorating with SerializableAttribute, however.

0

No. Attributes are not constraints, but are information added to metadata. You can test if the attribute has been set with:

If(typeof(T).GetCustomAttributes(typeof(SerializableAttribute), false).Length == 0) {
    throw new ...
}

The Boolean parameter determines if inherited attributes are to be considered or not.

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