Test

<back to all web services

HelloWithEnumList

import java.math.*
import java.util.*
import net.servicestack.client.*


open class HelloWithEnumList
{
    var enumProp:ArrayList<EnumType> = ArrayList<EnumType>()
    var enumWithValues:ArrayList<EnumWithValues> = ArrayList<EnumWithValues>()
    var nullableEnumProp:ArrayList<EnumType?> = ArrayList<EnumType?>()
    var enumFlags:ArrayList<EnumFlags> = ArrayList<EnumFlags>()
    var enumStyle:ArrayList<EnumStyle> = ArrayList<EnumStyle>()
}

enum class EnumType
{
    Value1,
    Value2,
    Value3,
}

enum class EnumWithValues
{
    None,
    Value1,
    Value2,
}

@Flags()
enum class EnumFlags(val value:Int)
{
    @SerializedName("0") Value0(0),
    @SerializedName("1") Value1(1),
    @SerializedName("2") Value2(2),
    @SerializedName("4") Value3(4),
    @SerializedName("7") Value123(7),
}

enum class EnumStyle
{
    Lower,
    Upper,
    PascalCase,
    CamelCase,
    CamelUPPER,
    PascalUPPER,
}

Kotlin HelloWithEnumList DTOs

To override the Content-type in your clients, use the HTTP Accept Header, append the .xml suffix or ?format=xml

HTTP + XML

The following are sample HTTP requests and responses. The placeholders shown need to be replaced with actual values.

POST /xml/oneway/HelloWithEnumList HTTP/1.1 
Host: test.servicestack.net 
Accept: application/xml
Content-Type: application/xml
Content-Length: length

<HelloWithEnumList xmlns:i="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xmlns="http://schemas.datacontract.org/2004/07/Test.ServiceModel">
  <EnumFlags>
    <EnumFlags>Value0</EnumFlags>
  </EnumFlags>
  <EnumProp>
    <EnumType>Value1</EnumType>
  </EnumProp>
  <EnumStyle>
    <EnumStyle>lower</EnumStyle>
  </EnumStyle>
  <EnumWithValues>
    <EnumWithValues>None</EnumWithValues>
  </EnumWithValues>
  <NullableEnumProp xmlns:d2p1="http://schemas.datacontract.org/2004/07/System">
    <d2p1:EnumType>Value1</d2p1:EnumType>
  </NullableEnumProp>
</HelloWithEnumList>