Accessing Attributes by Using Reflection (C# and Visual Basic)

The fact that you can define custom attributes and place them in your source code would be of little value without some way of retrieving that information and acting on it. By using reflection, you can retrieve the information that was defined with custom attributes. The key method is GetCustomAttributes, which returns an array of objects that are the run-time equivalents of the source code attributes. This method has several overloaded versions. For more information, see Attribute.

An attribute specification such as:

<Author("P. Ackerman", Version:=1.1)> 
Class SampleClass
    ' P. Ackerman's code goes here...
End Class
[Author("P. Ackerman", version = 1.1)]
class SampleClass

is conceptually equivalent to this:

Dim anonymousAuthorObject As Author = New Author("P. Ackerman")
anonymousAuthorObject.version = 1.1
Author anonymousAuthorObject = new Author("P. Ackerman");
anonymousAuthorObject.version = 1.1;

However, the code is not executed until SampleClass is queried for attributes. Calling GetCustomAttributes on SampleClass causes an Author object to be constructed and initialized as above. If the class has other attributes, other attribute objects are constructed similarly. GetCustomAttributes then returns the Author object and any other attribute objects in an array. You can then iterate over this array, determine what attributes were applied based on the type of each array element, and extract information from the attribute objects.

Example

Here is a complete example. A custom attribute is defined, applied to several entities, and retrieved via reflection.

' Multiuse attribute
<System.AttributeUsage(System.AttributeTargets.Class Or 
                       System.AttributeTargets.Struct, 
                       AllowMultiple:=True)> 
Public Class Author
    Inherits System.Attribute
    Private name As String
    Public version As Double
    Sub New(ByVal authorName As String)
        name = authorName

        ' Default value
        version = 1.0
    End Sub

    Function GetName() As String
        Return name
    End Function        
End Class

' Class with the Author attribute
<Author("P. Ackerman")> 
Public Class FirstClass
End Class

' Class without the Author attribute
Public Class SecondClass
End Class

' Class with multiple Author attributes.
<Author("P. Ackerman"), Author("R. Koch", Version:=2.0)> 
Public Class ThirdClass
End Class

Class TestAuthorAttribute
    Sub Main()
        PrintAuthorInfo(GetType(FirstClass))
        PrintAuthorInfo(GetType(SecondClass))
        PrintAuthorInfo(GetType(ThirdClass))
    End Sub

    Private Shared Sub PrintAuthorInfo(ByVal t As System.Type)
        System.Console.WriteLine("Author information for {0}", t)

        ' Using reflection
        Dim attrs() As System.Attribute = System.Attribute.GetCustomAttributes(t)

        ' Displaying output
        For Each attr In attrs
            Dim a As Author = CType(attr, Author)
            System.Console.WriteLine("   {0}, version {1:f}", a.GetName(), a.version)
        Next            
    End Sub

    ' Output:
    '   Author information for FirstClass
    '     P. Ackerman, version 1.00
    ' Author information for SecondClass
    ' Author information for ThirdClass
    '  R. Koch, version 2.00
    '  P. Ackerman, version 1.00

End Class
// Multiuse attribute.
[System.AttributeUsage(System.AttributeTargets.Class |
                       System.AttributeTargets.Struct,
                       AllowMultiple = true)  // Multiuse attribute.
]
public class Author : System.Attribute
{
    string name;
    public double version;

    public Author(string name)
    {
        this.name = name;

        // Default value.
        version = 1.0;
    }

    public string GetName()
    {
        return name;
    }
}

// Class with the Author attribute.
[Author("P. Ackerman")]
public class FirstClass
{
    // ...
}

// Class without the Author attribute.
public class SecondClass
{
    // ...
}

// Class with multiple Author attributes.
[Author("P. Ackerman"), Author("R. Koch", version = 2.0)]
public class ThirdClass
{
    // ...
}

class TestAuthorAttribute
{
    static void Test()
    {
        PrintAuthorInfo(typeof(FirstClass));
        PrintAuthorInfo(typeof(SecondClass));
        PrintAuthorInfo(typeof(ThirdClass));
    }

    private static void PrintAuthorInfo(System.Type t)
    {
        System.Console.WriteLine("Author information for {0}", t);

        // Using reflection.
        System.Attribute[] attrs = System.Attribute.GetCustomAttributes(t);  // Reflection.

        // Displaying output.
        foreach (System.Attribute attr in attrs)
        {
            if (attr is Author)
            {
                Author a = (Author)attr;
                System.Console.WriteLine("   {0}, version {1:f}", a.GetName(), a.version);
            }
        }
    }
}
/* Output:
    Author information for FirstClass
       P. Ackerman, version 1.00
    Author information for SecondClass
    Author information for ThirdClass
       R. Koch, version 2.00
       P. Ackerman, version 1.00
*/

See Also

Reference

Reflection (C# and Visual Basic)

Attributes (C# and Visual Basic)

Creating Custom Attributes (C# and Visual Basic)

System.Reflection

Attribute

Concepts

C# Programming Guide

Retrieving Information Stored in Attributes

Other Resources

Visual Basic Programming Guide