7

I am need help mapping my Domain Object to a ViewModel for use with my C#/MVC App

In the FormAnswer Class there can only be 1 Answer Type (AnswerCurrency, AnswerDateTime, AnswerBool,etc) this is enforced in the Database and Application Logic.

If a Answer exists it will needs to be to Mapped to the Answer Property in the FormAnswerModel if all values are null the Answer is a Empty String.

public class FormQuestion
{
   public int Id {get; set;)
   public string DataType {get; set;} 
   public string Question {get; set;} 
}

public class FormAnswer
{
   public int Id {get; set;)
   public int QuestionId {get; set;)
   public double? AnswerCurrency {get;set}
   public dateTime? AnswerDataTime {get;set}
   public bool? AnswerBool {get;set}
   public string AnswerString{get;set}
   public string AnswerText{get;set}
}

public class FormAnswerModel
{
   public int Id {get; set;)
   public int QuestionId {get; set;)
   public string Answer{get;set}
}
1
  • 1
    Please see the FAQ regarding signatures in posts.
    – M.Babcock
    Feb 9, 2012 at 4:10

2 Answers 2

18

ValueResolver is a good suggestion, especially if you have this pattern elsewhere. If you're looking for a quick and dirty version (that is, if this is the only place you need to handle this sort of situation), try this:

Mapper.CreateMap<FormAnswer, FormAnswerModel>()
    .ForMember(d => d.Answer, o => o.ResolveUsing(fa =>
        {
            string answer = String.Empty;
            if (fa.AnswerBool.HasValue)
            {
                return fa.AnswerBool.Value;
            }

            if(fa.AnswerCurrency.HasValue)
            {
                return fa.AnswerCurrency.Value;
            }

            if(fa.AnswerDateTime.HasValue)
            {
                return fa.AnswerDateTime;
            }

            if(!String.IsNullOrEmpty(fa.AnswerString))
            {
                return fa.AnswerString;
            }

            return answer;
        }
    ));
4
  • 1
    a bit off-topic, but calling ReverseMap() after that snippet would make it crash I guess ? is there a way to write this as a single IMappingExpression that works in both directions?
    – cmxl
    Feb 10, 2016 at 15:56
  • @cmxl Before you did that you'd have to add some type data to FormAnswerModel; as it is now, there's no way to know whether you should be converting the Answer string to a bool, double, Datetime, etc. And even with that information, I think you'd still have to manually write CreateMap<FormAnswerModel, FormAnswer>.
    – E.Z. Hart
    Feb 11, 2016 at 15:33
  • thanks! that's what i'm doing right now. I was just hoping for a smarter approach. ;)
    – cmxl
    Feb 11, 2016 at 15:49
  • 3
    From automapper 8.0, ResovleUsing was replaced by MapFrom. docs.automapper.org/en/stable/… Dec 4, 2019 at 12:46
2

You could use a custom mapping lambda method but it seems like you would need more logic here. A custom resolver seems to be a good option in this case.

See Automapper wiki

https://github.com/AutoMapper/AutoMapper/wiki/Custom-value-resolvers

In the mapping options you can specify a opt.ResolveUsing<TResolver>() where TResolver inherits from ValueResolver<FormAnswer, string>

Also, if I need to know how to do something with Automapper I find that the unit tests provide very rich documentation.

Hope that helps.

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