If it's internal
to an assembly that is not yours and the constructor is marked as private
, the author of the assembly is trying very hard to keep you from creating the object.
The below is really evil as you're relying on non-public classes and methods which could change on you without advance notice.
Added: System.ServiceModel.Channels.SelfSignedCertificate
is the internal
class I am trying to use
Do not do this. The framework could change under you in the blink of an eye ruining your code and all of your hard work.
That said, you could do this:
MethodInfo method = Type.GetType(assemblyQualifiedName).GetMethod("Create");
ABC o = (ABC)method.Invoke(null, new[] { "test" });
This invokes the static
method Create
. Another option is
MethodInfo method = Type.GetType(assemblyQualifiedName).GetConstructor(
BindingFlags.NonPublic | BindingFlags.Instance,
null,
new[] { typeof(string) },
null
);
ABC o = (ABC)method.Invoke(new[] { "test" });
which uses reflection to load the constructor that accepts a string
as a parameter.
An easy way to get the assembly-qualified name is
string name = typeof(somePublicType).Assembly.GetType("Namespace.ABC");
where somePublicType
is a type that is public and in the same assembly as ABC
.