UPDATE
Found the issue -- was inheriting from wrong class, needed to be JsonConverter.
I have a class that has a Location property of type System.Data.Entity.Spatial.DbGeography. The default Json.NET serializer puts out JSON text like this:
...
"PlaceType": 0,
"Location": {
"Geography": {
"CoordinateSystemId": 4326,
"WellKnownText": "POINT (-88.00000 44.00000)"
}
},
"AddedDT": null,
...
I want it to put out text like this:
...
"PlaceType": 0,
"Location": [-88.00000,44.00000],
"AddedDT": null,
...
...so it seems to me what I should do would be to override whatever converter is currently being used on the DbGeography type.
The examples I've seen so far that use CustomCreationConverters and ContractResolvers seem to address how you'd replace the serializer for the main class being serialized, not for a type that's only a property of that class. The examples that involve annotating the class that's being overridden don't work for me because I don't define DbGeography in my code and it's effectively a sealed class because it has no constructor and can only be instantiated by internal
factory methods.
Is there a way to apply a JsonConverter to a type fluently? If so, what would the converter look like? Do I just override the WriteJson() method?
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