I have an object not written by myself that I need to clone in memory. The object is not tagged ICloneable
or Serializable
so deep cloning through the interface or serialization will not work. Is there anyway to deep clone this object? A non-safe win32 API call maybe?
FYI Interfaces marked as ICloneable
are not necessarily deep copied. It is up to the implementer to implement ICloneable
and there is no guarantee they will have cloned it.
You say the object doesn't implement ISerializable
but does it have the Serializable
attribute?
Creating a deep copy via binary serialization is probably one of the easiest methods I know of, since you can clone any complex graph in 3-5 lines of code. Another option would be the XmlSerializer
if the object can be XmlSerialized
(You don't specify any attributes for serialization or implement interfaces however if there is an IDictionary
interface your hosed.
Outside of that I can't really think of anything. If all the data is publicly accessible you could do your own cloning routine. If its not you can still clone it by using reflection to get set the private data.
The "deep" is the tricky bit. For a shallow copy, you could use reflection to copy the fields (assuming none are readonly, which is a big assumption) - but it would be very hard to get this to work (automatically) otherwise.
The other option is to provide the serializer yourself (and serialize to deep-clone) - a "serialization surrogate". Here's a VB example.
I think the only way you could do this is with some serious reflection to pick apart the object and all its members (which may themselves be other objects with members, etc). That's what the framework serializer would be doing, but it will only do it for things which have been marked appropriately.
I'm not sure if an industrial-grade reflection library like Mono.Cecil might have some stuff which helps.
I doubt you're come up with a robust general purpose solution (for example, static members might be hard to deal with properly), but you might make something work in a specific case.
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