Question

When creating a class, a TypeConverter attribute can be applied to it s.t. using TypeDescriptor.GetConverter(typeof(T)) return the custom type converter. For instance:

[TypeConverter(typeof(FooConverter))]
public class Foo
{...}

public class FooConverter: TypeConverter
{...}

var tc = TypeDescriptor.GetConverter(typeof(T)); //returns a FooConverter instance.

This works as long as the class is of our making. But how would one provide a custom TypeConverter for a class which we cannot modify the source code? For example, how would one provide a custom TypeConverter for the the System.Version class (which does not have one)?

Was it helpful?

Solution

You can do it at runtime. With these classes:

class MyConverter : TypeConverter
{
}

sealed class MyClass
{   
}

You can use:

TypeDescriptor.AddAttributes(typeof(MyClass), new TypeConverterAttribute(typeof(MyConverter)));
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