Portable Class Libraries (PCLs) now officially deprecated [16 August 2017]
If you’re sharing code between different .NET implementations today,
you’re probably aware of Portable Class Libraries (PCLs). With the
release of .NET Standard 2.0, we’re now officially deprecating PCLs
and you should move your projects to .NET Standard.
Source: Announcing .NET Standard 2.0
Portable Class Library (PCL) now available on all platforms [14 Oct 2013]
Prior to today’s release, there was a license restriction with the PCL
reference assemblies which meant they could only be used on Windows.
With today’s release we are announcing a new standalone release of the
PCL reference assemblies with a license that allows it to be used on
any platform – including non-Microsoft ones. This enables developers
even more flexibility and to do great things with .NET.
Source: Portable Class Library (PCL) now available on all platforms
Download: Microsoft .NET Portable Library Reference Assemblies 4.6 RC
Just for the reference the allowed set of assemblies are:
mscorlib.dll
System.dll
System.Core.dll
System.Xml.dll
System.ComponentModel.Composition.dll (MEF)
System.Net.dll
System.Runtime.Serialization.dll
System.ServiceModel.dll
System.Xml.Serialization.dll
System.Windows.dll (from Silverlight)
As far as I know you need to mark the fields with DataMember attribute, and add the DataContract attribute.
UPDATE
Yes.
You can look how Json.NET portable class library solution is implemented. You can find the solution in the SourceSrcNewtonsoft.Json.Portable when you download the project from here Json.NET 4.5 Release 10 (source + binary).
Basically they are using an approach with a custom attribute provider
//don't use Serializable
#if !(SILVERLIGHT || WINDOWS_PHONE || NETFX_CORE || PORTABLE)
[Serializable]
#endif
//use custom provider
#if NETFX_CORE || PORTABLE
using ICustomAttributeProvider = Newtonsoft.Json.Utilities.CustomAttributeProvider;
#endif
And if project is PORTABLE
#if !PocketPC && !NET20
DataContractAttribute dataContractAttribute = GetDataContractAttribute(objectType);
if (dataContractAttribute != null)
return MemberSerialization.OptIn;
#endif
where OptIn description is:
/// <summary>
/// Only members must be marked with <see cref="JsonPropertyAttribute"/> or <see cref="DataMemberAttribute"/> are serialized.
/// This member serialization mode can also be set by marking the class with <see cref="DataContractAttribute"/>.
/// </summary>
OptIn,
Hope it helps.
UPDATE 2
Am I losing any abilities using [DataContract] instead of
[Serializable], or will I still be able to do everything that
[Serializable] supports?
You can do everything that Serializable supports except
control over how the object is serialized outside of setting the name and the order.
Using DataContractSerializer has several benefits:
serialize anything decorated with a [DataMember]
even if it's not public visible
can't serialize anything unless you specifically tell it to ("opt-in")
you can define the order in which the elements are serialized using the [Order=]
attribute on the [DataMember]
doesn't require a parameterless constructor for deserialization
is 10% faster than XmlSerializer.
Read more here: XmlSerializer vs DataContractSerializer
Also for the reference:
DataContract
supports serialization of the following kinds of types in the default mode:
CLR built-in types
Byte array, DateTime, TimeSpan, GUID, Uri, XmlQualifiedName,
XmlElement and XmlNode array
Enums
Types marked with DataContract or CollectionDataContract attribute
Types that implement IXmlSerializable
Arrays and Collection classes including List, Dictionary and
Hashtable
Types marked with Serializable attribute including those that
implement ISerializable
Types with none of the above attributes (POCO) but with a default
constructor