Lol, Ramon! You are most welcome. Glad I could assist.
On Feb 4, 12:58 am, Ramon Lopes <[email protected]> wrote: > Cerebrus, > > I am SO thankful! I spent an hour or so trying to solve this problem!! You > are a genius! > Thanks a lot!!! > > > > > > On Tue, Feb 3, 2009 at 4:31 PM, Cerebrus <[email protected]> wrote: > > > This is a common issue with Type.GetType to which you need to pass in > > the "fully qualified name" by which I do not mean the namespace > > qualified name, I mean the AssemblyQualifiedName. > > > Try this : > > -- > > > string name = "System.Windows.Forms.Button, System.Windows.Forms, > > Version=2.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b77a5c561934e089"; > > Type t = Type.GetType(name); > > if (t = null) > > { > > Console.WriteLine("I failed."); > > } > > else > > { > > Console.WriteLine("Mommy, I found a Button !! "); > > } > > > For this reason (you need to know the entire assembly qualified name), > > using the "typeof" keyword in C# proves very convenient. > > > On Feb 3, 10:31 pm, Ramon Lopes <[email protected]> wrote: > > > Hello everybody, > > > > I've been facing some problems using Reflection. > > > I have a class name, for example > > > > string name = "System.Windows.Forms.Button"; > > > > so, I would like to get a Type object of the name variable refers to. > > > > The method Type.GetType() accepts a string argument, but it doesn't work, > > > that is Type.GetType("System.Windows.Forms.Button") always returns Null. > > > > Could someone help me? > > > > -- > > > Ramon Pereira Lopes > > -- > Ramon Pereira Lopes- Hide quoted text - > > - Show quoted text -
