There are three ways of doing this; either you can use [XmlInclude]
against the type, or you can use XmlElement
/XmlArrayItem
against the property. They are all shown below; uncomment the pair you prefer:
using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Xml.Serialization;
public class MyWrapper {
//2: [XmlElement("A", Type = typeof(ChildA))]
//2: [XmlElement("B", Type = typeof(ChildB))]
//3: [XmlArrayItem("A", Type = typeof(ChildA))]
//3: [XmlArrayItem("B", Type = typeof(ChildB))]
public List<ChildClass> Data { get; set; }
}
//1: [XmlInclude(typeof(ChildA))]
//1: [XmlInclude(typeof(ChildB))]
public abstract class ChildClass {
public string ChildProp { get; set; }
}
public class ChildA : ChildClass {
public string AProp { get; set; }
}
public class ChildB : ChildClass {
public string BProp { get; set; }
}
static class Program {
static void Main() {
var ser = new XmlSerializer(typeof(MyWrapper));
var obj = new MyWrapper {
Data = new List<ChildClass> {
new ChildA { ChildProp = "abc", AProp = "def"},
new ChildB { ChildProp = "ghi", BProp = "jkl"}}
};
ser.Serialize(Console.Out, obj);
}
}