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Home/ Questions/Q 8745791
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 13, 20262026-06-13T12:05:33+00:00 2026-06-13T12:05:33+00:00

I have two classes that look like this: [XmlRoot(Foo)] public class Foo { [XmlArray(BarResponse)]

  • 0

I have two classes that look like this:

[XmlRoot("Foo")]
public class Foo
{
    [XmlArray("BarResponse")]
    [XmlArrayItem("Bar")]
    public List<Bar> bar {get; set;}
    //some other elements go here.
}

[XmlRoot("Bar")]
public class Bar
{
    [XmlAttribute("id")]
    public Int32 Id {get; set;}
    //some other elements go here.
}

The xml I’m receiving looks like this:

<?xml version="1.0"?>
<Foo>
    <BarResponse>
        <Bar id="0" />
        <Bar id="1" />
    </BarResponse>
</Foo>

When I attempt to deseralize this, I get an instance of the “Foo” class, and bar has one element in it, with all of it’s properties null or default. Where am I going wrong?

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-13T12:05:34+00:00Added an answer on June 13, 2026 at 12:05 pm

    try this:

    [TestFixture]
    public class BilldrTest
    {
        [Test]
        public void SerializeDeserializeTest()
        {
            var foo = new Foo();
            foo.Bars.Add(new Bar { Id = 1 });
            foo.Bars.Add(new Bar { Id = 2 });
            var xmlSerializer = new XmlSerializer(typeof (Foo));
            var stringBuilder = new StringBuilder();
            using (var stringWriter = new StringWriter(stringBuilder))
            {
                xmlSerializer.Serialize(stringWriter, foo);
            }
            string s = stringBuilder.ToString();
            Foo deserialized;
            using (var stringReader = new StringReader(s))
            {
                deserialized = (Foo) xmlSerializer.Deserialize(stringReader);
            }
            Assert.AreEqual(2,deserialized.Bars.Count);
        }
    }
    
    [XmlRoot("Foo")]
    public class Foo
    {
        public Foo()
        {
            Bars= new List<Bar>();
        }
        [XmlArray("BarResponses")]
        [XmlArrayItem(typeof(Bar))]
        public List<Bar> Bars { get; set; }
        //some other elements go here.
    }
    
    [XmlRoot("Bar")]
    public class Bar
    {
        [XmlAttribute("id")]
        public Int32 Id { get; set; }
        //some other elements go here.
    }
    
    • You can find info on the use of XmlRoot here
    • ArrayItemAttribute is used if you expect the array to contain different types

    You would get the same result stripping all attributes except for [XmlAttribute("id")], but I guess this is an excerpt from a context where it all is justified.

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