Many solutions are available that convert lists to DataTable
that use reflection, and that would work for converting anonymous types. However, it there are
It would absolutely be better to do this using proper named POCO/DTO/etc classes, but it can still be done. The cost of reflection can be removed by using meta-programming, ideally by using a pre-rolled library such as FastMember, as shown below.
Note that the use of anonymous types has forced the use of IList
here (rather than IList<T>
or List<T>
etc). The use of a generic version would be preferable, using named types. This would allow a few changes - in particular, itemType
would be typeof(T)
, and it would be possible to create the correct columns even for an empty table. Perhaps more importantly, it would enforce that the list is homogeneous, rather than having to make an assumption about that.
using FastMember;
using System;
using System.Collections;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Data;
static class Program
{
static void Main()
{
var list = GetList();
var table = ToTable(list);
}
static DataTable ToTable(IList source)
{
if (source == null) throw new ArgumentNullException();
var table = new DataTable();
if (source.Count == 0) return table;
// blatently assume the list is homogeneous
Type itemType = source[0].GetType();
table.TableName = itemType.Name;
List<string> names = new List<string>();
foreach (var prop in itemType.GetProperties())
{
if (prop.CanRead && prop.GetIndexParameters().Length == 0)
{
names.Add(prop.Name);
table.Columns.Add(prop.Name, prop.PropertyType);
}
}
names.TrimExcess();
var accessor = TypeAccessor.Create(itemType);
object[] values = new object[names.Count];
foreach (var row in source)
{
for (int i = 0; i < values.Length; i++)
{
values[i] = accessor[row, names[i]];
}
table.Rows.Add(values);
}
return table;
}
static IList GetList()
{
return new[] {
new { foo = "abc", bar = 123},
new { foo = "def", bar = 456},
new { foo = "ghi", bar = 789},
};
}
}
Improved on @MarcGravell's answer to support:
Nullable types.
static public DataTable ToDataTable(this IList anonymousSource, List<string> keepOrderedFieldsOpt = null)
{
// https://stackoverflow.com/a/13153479/538763 - @MarcGravell
// Added keepOrderedFieldsOpt, nullable types - @crokusek
if (anonymousSource == null) throw new ArgumentNullException();
DataTable table = new DataTable();
if (anonymousSource.Count == 0) return table;
// blatently assume the list is homogeneous
Type itemType = anonymousSource[0].GetType();
table.TableName = itemType.Name;
// Build up orderedColumns
//
List<PropertyInfo> orderedColumns;
if (keepOrderedFieldsOpt != null)
{
Dictionary<string, PropertyInfo> propertiesByName = itemType.GetProperties()
.ToDictionary(p => p.Name, p => p);
orderedColumns = new List<PropertyInfo>();
List<string> missingFields = null;
foreach (string field in keepOrderedFieldsOpt)
{
PropertyInfo tempPropertyInfo;
if (propertiesByName.TryGetValue(field, out tempPropertyInfo))
orderedColumns.Add(tempPropertyInfo);
else
(missingFields ?? (missingFields = new List<string>())).Add(field);
}
if (missingFields != null)
throw new ArgumentOutOfRangeException("keepOrderedFieldsOpt", "Argument keepOrderedFieldsOpt contains invalid field name(s): " + String.Join(", ", missingFields));
}
else
orderedColumns = itemType.GetProperties().ToList();
List<string> names = new List<string>();
foreach (PropertyInfo prop in orderedColumns)
{
if (prop.CanRead && prop.GetIndexParameters().Length == 0)
{
names.Add(prop.Name);
// Nullable support from stackoverflow.com/a/23233413/538763 - @Damith
table.Columns.Add(prop.Name, Nullable.GetUnderlyingType(prop.PropertyType) ?? prop.PropertyType);
}
}
names.TrimExcess();
TypeAccessor accessor = TypeAccessor.Create(itemType);
object[] values = new object[names.Count];
foreach (var row in anonymousSource)
{
for (int i = 0; i < values.Length; i++)
values[i] = accessor[row, names[i]];
table.Rows.Add(values);
}
return table;
}