I've got an object that has a collection of properties. When I get the specific entity I can see the field I'm looking for (opportunityid
) and that it's Value
attribute is the Guid
for this opportunity. This is the value I want, but it won't always be for an opportunity, and therefore I can't always look at opportunityid
, so I need to get the field based on input supplied by the user.
My code so far is:
Guid attrGuid = new Guid();
BusinessEntityCollection members = CrmWebService.RetrieveMultiple(query);
if (members.BusinessEntities.Length > 0)
{
try
{
dynamic attr = members.BusinessEntities[0];
//Get collection of opportunity properties
System.Reflection.PropertyInfo[] Props = attr.GetType().GetProperties();
System.Reflection.PropertyInfo info = Props.FirstOrDefault(x => x.Name == GuidAttributeName);
attrGuid = info.PropertyType.GUID; //doesn't work.
}
catch (Exception ex)
{
throw new Exception("An error occurred when retrieving the value for " + attributeName + ". Error: " + ex.Message);
}
}
The dynamic attr
contains the field I'm looking for (in this case opportunityid
), which in turn contains a value field, which is the correct Guid
. However, when I get the PropertyInfo
info (opportunityid
) it no longer has a Value
attribute. I tried looking at the PropertyType.GUID
but this doesn't return the correct Guid
. How can I get the value for this property?
try with:
Use
PropertyInfo.GetValue()
. Assuming your property has the typeGuid?
then this should work:Note that an exception will be thrown if the property value is null.
If the name of the property is changing, you should use
GetValue
:The last attribute of that method can be
null
, since it is the index value, and that is only needed when accessing arrays, likeValue[1,2]
.If you know the name of the attribute on beforehand, you could use the
dynamic
behavior of it: you can call the property without the need of doing reflection yourself:Unless the property is
static
, it is not enough to get aPropertyInfo
object to get a value of a property. When you write "plain" C# and you need to get a value of some property, say,MyProperty
, you write this:You supply two things - the property name (i.e. what to get) and the object (i.e. from where to get it).
PropertyInfo
represents the "what". You need to specify "from where" separately. When you callyou pass the "from where" to the
PropertyInfo
, letting it extract the value of the property from the object for you.Note: prior to .NET 4.5 you need to pass null as a second argument: