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Working with attachments
Rian Stockbower edited this page Apr 7, 2018
·
4 revisions
RFC 5545 allows for attachments on several calendar components.
RFC 5445 | ical.net |
---|---|
VALARM | Alarm |
VEVENT | CalendarEvent |
VTODO | Todo |
VJOURNAL | Journal |
Attachments come in two forms:
-
Uri
s pointing to some network-accessible resource - Base64-encoded strings that can represent anything
ical.net can serialize any URI that System.Uri can understand: HTTP, email addresses, LDAP URLs, local filesystem paths, UNC paths, etc.
var attachment = new Attachment(new Uri("ldap://example.com:3333/o=eExample Industries,c=3DUS??(cn=3DBJohn Smith)"));
var calendar = new Calendar();
var vEvent = new CalendarEvent
{
Start = new CalDateTime(DateTime.Parse("2016-07-23T07:00:00-04:00")),
End = new CalDateTime(DateTime.Parse("2016-07-23T08:00:00-04:00")),
};
vEvent.Attachments = new List<Attachment> { attachment };
calendar.Events.Add(vEvent);
And we can get the URI back:
var uri = calendar
.Events
.First()
.Attachments
.Select(a => a.Uri)
.Single();
Base64-encoded attachments can represent anything: numbers, strings, serialized objects, etc. If you can turn it into a byte array (byte[]
), you can create an attachment from it.
This example shows how to attach a JSON-serialized representation of an object to a CalendarEvent
.
public class SomeObject
{
public List<string> TheList { get; }
public int TheNumber { get; }
public ISet<string> TheSet { get; }
public SomeObject(List<string> theList, int theNumber, IEnumerable<string> theSet)
{
TheList = theList;
TheNumber = theNumber;
TheSet = new HashSet<string>(theSet);
}
}
Suppose you serialize an instance to JSON:
var collection = new List<string>
{
"Foo", "Bar", "Baz", "Foo", "Bar", "Baz", "Foo", "Bar", "Baz",
"Foo", "Bar", "Baz", "Foo", "Bar", "Baz", "Foo", "Bar", "Baz",
};
var someObject = new SomeObject(thisList: collection, theNumber: 42, theSet: collection);
var json = JsonConvert.SerializeObject(someObject); //JSON.net
And you want to attach it to an instance of a CalendarEvent
object:
var asBytes = Encoding.UTF8.GetBytes(json);
var binaryAttachment = new Attachment(asBytes);
var calendar = new Calendar();
var vEvent = new CalendarEvent
{
Start = new CalDateTime(DateTime.Parse("2016-07-23T07:00:00-04:00")),
End = new CalDateTime(DateTime.Parse("2016-07-23T08:00:00-04:00")),
};
vEvent.Attachments = new List<Attachment> { attachment };
calendar.Events.Add(vEvent);
You can then rehydrate an instance of SomeObject
:
var newSomeObj = calendar
.Events
.First()
.Attachments
.Select(a => Encoding.UTF8.GetString(a.Data))
.Select(json => JsonConvert.DeserializeObject<SomeObject>(json))
.Single();