Is there an easy way to get DataContractSerializer to spit out formatted XML rather then one long string? I don\'t want to change the tags or content in any way, just have it ad
As bendewey says, XmlWriterSettings is what you need - e.g. something like
var ds = new DataContractSerializer(typeof(Foo));
var settings = new XmlWriterSettings { Indent = true };
using (var w = XmlWriter.Create("fooOutput.xml", settings))
ds.WriteObject(w, someFoos);
Be careful about adjusting whitespace in XML documents! Adjusting whitespace will make the XML more readable for us humans, but it may interfere with machine parsing.
According to the XML standard, whitespace is significant by default. In other words, as far as XML is concerned, white space is content.
If you feed your nicely formatted XML into an XML Document object, you will get a different result than the version that has no spaces or line breaks in it. You will get additional text nodes added to the version that has been formatted.
This MSDN article on XML White Space has several examples that show how tricky white space can be.
If you're formatting the XML only for human consumption, it doesn't matter. But if you try to round-trip your formatted document, you could run into trouble.
Since one of the key primary benefits of using DataContractSerializer is the ability to serialize objects and deserialize XML seamlessly, it's usually best to leave the ugly output alone.
I usually paste the output into NotePad++ and run an XML-tidy macro over it when I want to read it for debugging purposes.
public static string SerializeEntity<T>(T source)
{
using (MemoryStream ms = new MemoryStream())
{
NetDataContractSerializer serializer = new NetDataContractSerializer();
serializer.Serialize(ms, source);
return System.Text.Encoding.ASCII.GetString(ms.ToArray());
}
}
public static T DeSerializeEntity<T>(string xml)
{
using (MemoryStream ms = new MemoryStream(System.Text.Encoding.ASCII.GetBytes(xml)))
{
NetDataContractSerializer serializer = new NetDataContractSerializer();
return (T)serializer.Deserialize(ms);
}
}
based on the other samples posted here that use XmlWriter, here's a version (from http://ClipFlair.codeplex.com) that works with streams (and Ionic.Zip library in specific) and also shows how the code is when you don't apply formatting (using conditional compilation - just comment out the #define to make it write unformatted XML)
#define WRITE_FORMATTED_XML
using System.Xml;
namespace ClipFlair.Windows
{
public partial class BaseWindow : FloatingWindow
{
//...
#if WRITE_FORMATTED_XML
private static XmlWriterSettings XML_WRITER_SETTINGS = new XmlWriterSettings() { Indent=true, IndentChars=" "};
#endif
//...
public virtual void SaveOptions(ZipFile zip, string zipFolder = "") //THIS IS THE CORE SAVING LOGIC
{
if (SavingOptions != null) SavingOptions(this, null); //notify any listeners
View.Busy = true;
try
{
ZipEntry optionsXML = zip.AddEntry(zipFolder + "/" + View.GetType().FullName + ".options.xml",
new WriteDelegate((entryName, stream) =>
{
DataContractSerializer serializer = new DataContractSerializer(View.GetType()); //assuming current View isn't null
#if WRITE_FORMATTED_XML
using (XmlWriter writer = XmlWriter.Create(stream, XML_WRITER_SETTINGS))
serializer.WriteObject(writer, View);
#else
serializer.WriteObject(stream, View);
#endif
}));
}
catch (Exception e)
{
MessageBox.Show("ClipFlair options save failed: " + e.Message); //TODO: find the parent window
}
finally
{
View.Busy = false; //in any case (error or not) clear the Busy flag
}
if (SavedOptions != null) SavedOptions(this, null); //notify any listeners
}
//...
}
}
Take a look at the Indent
property of the XmlWriterSettings
Update: Here is a good link from MSDN on How to: Specify the Output format on the XmlWriter
Additionally, here is a sample:
class Program
{
static void Main(string[] args)
{
var Mark = new Person()
{
Name = "Mark",
Email = "mark@example.com"
};
var serializer = new DataContractSerializer(typeof(Person));
var settings = new XmlWriterSettings()
{
Indent = true,
IndentChars = "\t"
};
using (var writer = XmlWriter.Create(Console.Out, settings))
{
serializer.WriteObject(writer, Mark);
}
Console.ReadLine();
}
}
public class Person
{
public string Name { get; set; }
public string Email { get; set; }
}