When to use DataContract and DataMember attributes?
I am very confused about the DataContract
attribute in WCF. As per my knowledge it is used for serialization user defined type like classes. I write a one class which is expose at client side.
[DataContract] public class Contact { [DataMember] public int Roll { get; set; } [DataMember] public string Name { get; set; } [DataMember] public string Address { get; set; } [DataMember] public int Age { get; set; } }
It is working properly but when I remove DataContract
at class level as well as DataMember
it is also work properly. I can't understand that if it is working properly so why there is a need of DataContract
? Can any one tell me what is the actual use of DataContract
?
My service contract looks like this
[ServiceContract] public interface IRestServiceImpl { [OperationContract] Contact XmlData(string id); }
解答:
Since a lot of programmers were overwhelmed with the [DataContract]
and [DataMember]
attributes, with .NET 3.5 SP1, Microsoft made the data contract serializer handle all classes - even without any of those attributes - much like the old XML serializer.
So as of .NET 3.5 SP1, you don't have to add data contract or data member attributes anymore - if you don't then the data contract serializer will serialize all public properties on your class, just like the XML serializer would.
HOWEVER: by not adding those attributes, you lose a lot of useful capabilities:
[DataContract]
, you cannot define an XML namespace for your data to live in[DataMember]
, you cannot serialize non-public properties or fields[DataMember]
, you cannot define an order of serialization (Order=
) and the DCS will serialize all properties alphabetically[DataMember]
, you cannot define a different name for your property (Name=
)[DataMember]
, you cannot define things like IsRequired=
or other useful attributes[DataMember]
, you cannot leave out certain public properties - all public properties will be serialized by the DCSSo for a "quick'n'dirty" solution, leaving away the [DataContract]
and [DataMember]
attributes will work - but it's still a good idea to have them on your data classes - just to be more explicit about what you're doing, and to give yourself access to all those additional features that you don't get without them...