Loop DynamicObject properties

joeriks picture joeriks · Jan 27, 2011 · Viewed 54k times · Source

I'm trying to understand the DynamicObject type. Found this MSDN article to be very consise and clear as how to create and use DynamicObject:

http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/system.dynamic.dynamicobject.aspx

The article contains a simple DynamicDictionary class that inherits from DynamicObject.

Now I want to iterate over my dynamically created DynamicObject properties:

dynamic d = new DynamicDictionary();
d.Name = "Myname";
d.Number = 1080;

foreach (var prop in d.GetType().GetProperties())
{
  Console.Write prop.Key;
  Console.Write prop.Value;
}

Obviously that does not work. I want to learn how to do this without a change in my DynamicDictionary class, since I'm really trying to learn how to use this for all kinds of existing objects that inherits from DynamicObject.

Is Reflection needed? I must be missing something...

Answer

Jeff Mercado picture Jeff Mercado · Jan 27, 2011

I believe you'd be interested in the ExpandoObject class. The DynamicObject class is just a base where you're meant to provide all the logic. It explicitly implements the IDictionary<string, object> interface so you can access it properties or add new ones that way.

// declare the ExpandoObject
dynamic expObj = new ExpandoObject();
expObj.Name = "MyName";
expObj.Number = 1000;

// print the dynamically added properties
foreach (KeyValuePair<string, object> kvp in expObj) // enumerating over it exposes the Properties and Values as a KeyValuePair
    Console.WriteLine("{0} = {1}", kvp.Key, kvp.Value);

// cast to an IDictionary<string, object>
IDictionary<string, object> expDict = expObj;

// add a new property via the dictionary reference
expDict["Foo"] = "Bar";

// verify it's been added on the original dynamic reference
Console.WriteLine(expObj.Foo);

I had just realized that you are implementing the DynamicDictionary class and misunderstood your question. Sorry.

When used with a dynamic reference, you only have access to publicly exposed members. Since only Count is declared public (besides the other DynamicObject members), you'd need to use reflection in order to access the inner dictionary to easily get those values (if you don't intend to make any further changes).