What's the meaning of "apostrophe + number" in the object type of properties with generics (eg. "Collection`1")?
I have an object (MyObject
) with a property (MyProperty
). I want to get it's type name (i.e. String
or MyClass
etc.). I use:
PropertyInfo propInfo = typeof(MyObject).GetProperty("MyProp开发者_StackOverflow社区erty");
Console.WriteLine(propInfo.PropertyType.Name);
Console.WriteLine(propInfo.PropertyType.FullName);
No problem with simple types, but when MyProperty
is a generic type, I face problems on getting it's name (e.g. Collection<String>
). It prints:
Collection`1
System.Collections.ObjectModel.Collection`1[[System.String, mscorlib, Version=2.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b77a5c561934e089]]
What is that `1
? And how can I obtain "Collection<String>
"?
The `1
means a generic type, with 1 generic parameter.
One way of getting the string is by using the System.CodeDom, as suggested by @LukeH:
using System;
using System.CodeDom;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using Microsoft.CSharp;
namespace ConsoleApplication1
{
class Program
{
static void Main(string[] args)
{
using (var p = new CSharpCodeProvider())
{
var r = new CodeTypeReference(typeof(Dictionary<string, int>));
Console.WriteLine(p.GetTypeOutput(r));
}
}
}
}
An alternative method is here. See below for @jaredpar's code:
public static string GetFriendlyTypeName(Type type) {
if (type.IsGenericParameter)
{
return type.Name;
}
if (!type.IsGenericType)
{
return type.FullName;
}
var builder = new System.Text.StringBuilder();
var name = type.Name;
var index = name.IndexOf("`");
builder.AppendFormat("{0}.{1}", type.Namespace, name.Substring(0, index));
builder.Append('<');
var first = true;
foreach (var arg in type.GetGenericArguments())
{
if (!first)
{
builder.Append(',');
}
builder.Append(GetFriendlyTypeName(arg));
first = false;
}
builder.Append('>');
return builder.ToString();
}
This is a CLR internal typename.
The number is the number of generic type parameters, since types can be overloaded.
(Func`1
and Func`2
are different types)
There is no built-in way to get a C#-style typename, since the CLR has nothing to do with C#.
SLaks already explained what `1 means.
About your second question: You can obtain the name of the generic type parameters by using Type.GetGenericArguments:
if (propInfo.PropertyType.IsGenericType) {
Type[] typeArguments = propInfo.PropertyType.GetGenericArguments();
// typeArguments now contains an array of types ({String} in your example).
}
精彩评论