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I'm trying to understand the use of Attributes a bit better. I understand that:

Now I wants to do some more with attributes and curious about:

  • How predefined attributes (e.g. DllImportAttribute or STAThread) perform there functionalities? Because we just use these attributes and respective functionalities are performed. e.g. With the help of DllImportAttribute, I just declare that my method abc() needs xyz.dll and respective DLL is loaded. I didn't write code to search and load the DLL xyz.dll.
  • Dose .NET Runtime Environment or Compilers provide special treatment to predefined attributes? Here by special treatment I meant that, dose .NET Runtime Environment or Compilers detects that there is some predefined attributes used in code and runs respective method?
  • If so then, how can I provide/add such information with .NET Runtime Environment or Compilers (even if only at my local PC) so that it runs a special method whenever my user defined attribute is used in any of the project?
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  • I don't know java and I have no clue what is your problem with attributes. Sounds a bit broad to me, rather ask 2 questions.
    – Sinatr
    Mar 14, 2018 at 10:42
  • Sounds like you want to use attributes to specify certain code to run before/after/on condition upon running method, right? Google for code contract c#.
    – Sinatr
    Mar 14, 2018 at 10:47
  • @Sinatr Ok, I have created a separate question for Annotations here. I'll update this question for C#(code and question clarity), as on this question we are in discussion on the response of @MichaelRandall for Attributes in C#.NET.
    – cse
    Mar 14, 2018 at 12:27
  • @MichaelRandall I want to understand that how I can create my custom attribute so that .NET Runtime notify me whenever my custom attribute is used in code. I have updated my question for more clarity.
    – cse
    Mar 14, 2018 at 19:57
  • 1
    The non-intuitive requirement is that there must be some code that uses Reflection to find the attribute back. That code is often very well hidden. Like [DllImport], built into the jitter. [STAThread], built in the CLR. Also, say, [Browsable], built into the PropertyGrid control, [AssemblyVersion], built into the C# compiler. This kind of reflection code is not extensible by mere mortals. So "run a special method" is not really in the cards. You could consider an IL rewriter, PostSharp is a product that does this. May 15, 2018 at 10:32

1 Answer 1

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There is no mystery really...

An attribute is actually an object that is associated with any of these elements: Assembly, Class, Method, Delegate, Enum, Event, Field, Interface, Property and Struct.

They can be used to associate declarative information and retrieve such information (at Runtime) by using reflection. In other words, you can use attributes to inject additional information to the assemblies that can be queried at Runtime if needed using reflection.

An attribute basically just comprises of its name and optionally, a list of parameters.

From MSDN Attributes (C#)

Attributes provide a powerful method of associating metadata, or declarative information, with code (assemblies, types, methods, properties, and so forth). After an attribute is associated with a program entity, the attribute can be queried at run time by using a technique called reflection. For more information, see Reflection (C#).

Attributes have the following properties:

  • Attributes add metadata to your program. Metadata is information about the types defined in a program. All .NET assemblies contain a specified set of metadata that describes the types and type members defined in the assembly. You can add custom attributes to specify any additional information that is required. For more information, see, Creating Custom Attributes (C#).

  • You can apply one or more attributes to entire assemblies, modules, or smaller program elements such as classes and properties.

  • Attributes can accept arguments in the same way as methods and properties.

Your program can examine its own metadata or the metadata in other programs by using reflection. For more information, see Accessing Attributes by Using Reflection (C#).

If you want to receive information about the Metadata stored in an Attribute you need to do something like this

Exmaple

Lifted from How do I read an attribute on a class at runtime?

[DomainName("MyTable")]
Public class MyClass : DomainBase
{}

...

public static class AttributeExtensions
{
    public static TValue GetAttributeValue<TAttribute, TValue>(
        this Type type, 
        Func<TAttribute, TValue> valueSelector) 
        where TAttribute : Attribute
    {
        var att = type.GetCustomAttributes(
            typeof(TAttribute), true
        ).FirstOrDefault() as TAttribute;
        if (att != null)
        {
            return valueSelector(att);
        }
        return default(TValue);
    }
}

and use like this:

string name = typeof(MyClass).GetAttributeValue((DomainNameAttribute dna) => dna.Name);
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  • I wonder how some attributes are handled mysteriously ? e.g. DllImportAttribute or STAThread. Does .NET compilers having special supports for such, predefined attributes? If yes then Is there any mechanism so that we can add such support for user defined attributes?
    – cse
    Mar 14, 2018 at 10:32
  • I understand that I can use Reflections, if I have to use then explicitely. But when these Reflections are called for Attributes like DllImportAttribute or STAThread? And who calls it? .NET compilers, .NET Run-time Envirenment or something else?
    – cse
    Mar 14, 2018 at 10:39
  • @cse Yeah the framework, deep down somewhere. you can actually search the Microsoft source for framework code.
    – TheGeneral
    Mar 14, 2018 at 10:41
  • Yeah there are more qualified people to say, however it is just used like everyone else can use attributes. and i doubt would be a special case. that is my guess
    – TheGeneral
    Mar 14, 2018 at 10:43
  • "But when these Reflections are called for Attributes like DllImportAttribute or STAThread" - those are used by .net infrastructure, you don't care when they are called, you only care to specify those to achieve certain things.
    – Sinatr
    Mar 14, 2018 at 10:44

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