with XmlSerializer
things are either lists or they have members. To do that you need:
[XmlRoot("myroot")]
public class MyRoot {
[XmlElement("items")]
public MyListWrapper Items {get;set;}
}
public class MyListWrapper {
[XmlAttribute("attr1")]
public string Attribute1 {get;set;}
[XmlAttribute("attr2")]
public string Attribute2 {get;set;}
[XmlElement("item")]
public List<MyItem> Items {get;set;}
}
public class MyItem {
[XmlAttribute("id")]
public int Id {get;set;}
}
with example:
var ser = new XmlSerializer(typeof(MyRoot));
var obj = new MyRoot
{
Items = new MyListWrapper
{
Attribute1 = "hello",
Attribute2 = "world",
Items = new List<MyItem>
{
new MyItem { Id = 1},
new MyItem { Id = 2},
new MyItem { Id = 3}
}
}
};
ser.Serialize(Console.Out, obj);
which generates:
<myroot xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xmlns:xsd="http://
www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema">
<items attr1="hello" attr2="world">
<item id="1" />
<item id="2" />
<item id="3" />
</items>
</myroot>
you can remove the xsi
/xsd
namespace aliases if you want, of course.
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