views:

1938

answers:

2

I have created a C# class file by using a XSD-file as an input. One of my properties look like this:

 private System.DateTime timeField;

 [System.Xml.Serialization.XmlElementAttribute(DataType="time")]
 public System.DateTime Time {
     get {
         return this.timeField;
     }
     set {
         this.timeField = value;
     }
 }

When serialized, the contents of the file now looks like this:

<Time>14:04:02.1661975+02:00</Time>

Is it possible, with XmlAttributes on the property, to have it render without the milliseconds and the GMT-value like this?

<Time>14:04:02</Time>

Is this possible, or do i need to hack together some sort of xsl/xpath-replace-magic after the class has been serialized?

It is not a solution to changing the object to String, because it is used like a DateTime in the rest of the application and allows us to create an xml-representation from an object by using the XmlSerializer.Serialize() method.

The reason I need to remove the extra info from the field is that the receiving system does not conform to the w3c-standards for the time datatype.

+6  A: 

You could create a string property that does the translation to/from your timeField field and put the serialization attribute on that instead the the real DateTime property that the rest of the application uses.

Jeffrey L Whitledge
I had to do exactly the same today :)
leppie
Will this also work if we later need to deserialize the same file?
Espo
Espo: yes it will, see code in my answer :)
Matt Howells
That is how i solved it. Which I could accept both answers, but Jeffrey was first. The best I can do is an upvote :)
Espo
+8  A: 

Put [XmlIgnore] on the Time property.

Then add a new property:

[XmlElement(DataType="string",ElementName="Time")]
public String TimeString
{
    get { return this.timeField.ToString("yyyy-MM-dd"); }
    set { this.timeField = DateTime.ParseExact(value, "yyyy-MM-dd", CultureInfo.InvariantCulture); }
}
Matt Howells
Does this work when the property is private ? I thought xml serialization required public properties ?
Frederik Gheysels
Yes, Frederik is right. This won't work with a private method. If you make that method public it will serialize properly.
Ryan