A slight variation on Plamen's answer.
- Arrays seem to have an empty
GenericTypeArguments
so added GetElementType()
- Renamed class to avoid clashing with the framework class
ArrayModelBinder
.
- Added a check on the element type as it's required.
- More options for surrounding the array with brackets.
public class CustomArrayModelBinder : IModelBinder
{
public Task BindModelAsync(ModelBindingContext bindingContext)
{
if (!bindingContext.ModelMetadata.IsEnumerableType)
{
bindingContext.Result = ModelBindingResult.Failed();
return Task.CompletedTask;
}
var value = bindingContext.ValueProvider
.GetValue(bindingContext.ModelName)
.ToString();
if (string.IsNullOrWhiteSpace(value))
{
bindingContext.Result = ModelBindingResult.Success(null);
return Task.CompletedTask;
}
var elementType = bindingContext.ModelType.GetElementType() ??
bindingContext.ModelType.GetTypeInfo().GenericTypeArguments.FirstOrDefault();
if (elementType == null)
{
bindingContext.Result = ModelBindingResult.Failed();
return Task.CompletedTask;
}
var converter = TypeDescriptor.GetConverter(elementType);
var values = value.Split(',', StringSplitOptions.RemoveEmptyEntries)
.Select(x => converter.ConvertFromString(Clean(x)))
.ToArray();
var typedValues = Array.CreateInstance(elementType, values.Length);
values.CopyTo(typedValues, 0);
bindingContext.Model = typedValues;
bindingContext.Result = ModelBindingResult.Success(bindingContext.Model);
return Task.CompletedTask;
}
private static string Clean(string str)
{
return str.Trim('(', ')').Trim('[', ']').Trim();
}
}
Then use with an IEnumerable<T>
, IList<T>
or array T[]
[ModelBinder(BinderType = typeof(CustomArrayModelBinder))] IEnumerable<T> ids
... T[] ids
... IList<T> ids
The parameter could be in path or query with optional brackets.
[Route("resources/{ids}")]
resource/ids/1,2,3
resource/ids/(1,2,3)
resource/ids/[1,2,3]
[Route("resources")]
resource?ids=1,2,3
resource?ids=(1,2,3)
resource?ids=[1,2,3]