OPC Studio User's Guide and Reference
DataTypeId Property (UAGenericObject)
Example 



View with Navigation Tools
OpcLabs.EasyOpcUA Assembly > OpcLabs.EasyOpc.UA.ComplexData Namespace > UAGenericObject Class : DataTypeId Property
The data type ID of the data type of this generic object.
Syntax
'Declaration
 
Public Property DataTypeId As UAModelNodeDescriptor
 
'Usage
 
Dim instance As UAGenericObject
Dim value As UAModelNodeDescriptor
 
instance.DataTypeId = value
 
value = instance.DataTypeId
Remarks

When the generic object is obtained from the server (such as by reads and subscriptions), the component always fills in the DataTypeId with a data type Id that is not OpcLabs.EasyOpc.UA.InformationModel.UAModelNodeDescriptor.Null.

When the generic object is to be transferred to the server (such as by writing), the component will use the data type ID provided in DataTypeId if it is not equal to OpcLabs.EasyOpc.UA.InformationModel.UAModelNodeDescriptor.Null. Otherwise, the component will try to determine the data type (ID) itself, which may not work in case the actual data to be written are a subtype of the node's data type (and which is always the case if the node's data type is abstract).

Example

.NET

COM

// Shows how to write complex data with OPC UA Complex Data plug-in.
//
// Find all latest examples here: https://opclabs.doc-that.com/files/onlinedocs/OPCLabs-OpcStudio/Latest/examples.html .

using System;
using OpcLabs.BaseLib.DataTypeModel;
using OpcLabs.EasyOpc.UA;
using OpcLabs.EasyOpc.UA.ComplexData;
using OpcLabs.EasyOpc.UA.OperationModel;

namespace UADocExamples.ComplexData._EasyUAClient
{
    class WriteValue
    {
        public static void Main1()
        {
            // Define which server and node we will work with.
            UAEndpointDescriptor endpointDescriptor =
                "opc.tcp://opcua.demo-this.com:51210/UA/SampleServer";
            // or "http://opcua.demo-this.com:51211/UA/SampleServer" (currently not supported)
            // or "https://opcua.demo-this.com:51212/UA/SampleServer/"
            UANodeDescriptor nodeDescriptor =
                "nsu=http://test.org/UA/Data/ ;i=10239"; // [ObjectsFolder]/Data.Static.Scalar.StructureValue

            // Instantiate the client object.
            var client = new EasyUAClient();

            // Read a node which returns complex data. 
            // We know that this node returns complex data, so we can type cast to UAGenericObject.
            Console.WriteLine("Reading...");
            UAGenericObject genericObject;
            try
            {
                genericObject = (UAGenericObject)client.ReadValue(endpointDescriptor, nodeDescriptor);
            }
            catch (UAException uaException)
            {
                Console.WriteLine("*** Failure: {0}", uaException.GetBaseException().Message);
                return;
            }


            // Modify the data read.
            // This node returns one of the two data types, randomly (this is not common, usually the type is fixed). The
            // data types are sub-types of one common type which the data type of the node. We therefore use the data type 
            // ID in the returned UAGenericObject to detect which data type has been returned.

            // For processing the internals of the data, refer to examples for GenericData and DataType classes.
            // We know how the data is structured, and have hard-coded a logic that modifies certain values inside. It is
            // also possible to discover the structure of the data type in the program, and write generic clients that can 
            // cope with any kind of complex data.
            //
            // Note that the code below is not fully robust - it will throw an exception if the data is not as expected.
            Console.WriteLine("Modifying...");
            Console.WriteLine(genericObject.DataTypeId);
            if (genericObject.DataTypeId.NodeDescriptor.Match("nsu=http://test.org/UA/Data/ ;i=9440"))  // ScalarValueDataType
            {
                // Negate the byte in the "ByteValue" field.
                var structuredData = (StructuredData)genericObject.GenericData;
                var byteValue = (PrimitiveData)structuredData.FieldData["ByteValue"];
                byteValue.Value = (Byte)~((Byte)byteValue.Value);
                Console.WriteLine(byteValue.Value);
            }
            else if (genericObject.DataTypeId.NodeDescriptor.Match("nsu=http://test.org/UA/Data/ ;i=9669")) // ArrayValueDataType
            {
                // Negate bytes at indexes 0 and 1 of the array in the "ByteValue" field.
                var structuredData = (StructuredData)genericObject.GenericData;
                var byteValue = (SequenceData)structuredData.FieldData["ByteValue"];
                var element0 = (PrimitiveData)byteValue.Elements[0];
                var element1 = (PrimitiveData)byteValue.Elements[1];
                element0.Value = (Byte)~((Byte)element0.Value);
                element1.Value = (Byte)~((Byte)element1.Value);
                Console.WriteLine(element0.Value);
                Console.WriteLine(element1.Value);
            }


            // Write the modified complex data back to the node.
            // The data type ID in the UAGenericObject is borrowed without change from what we have read, so that the server
            // knows which data type we are writing. The data type ID not necessary if writing precisely the same data type
            // as the node has (not a subtype).
            Console.WriteLine("Writing...");
            try
            {
                client.WriteValue(endpointDescriptor, nodeDescriptor, genericObject);
            }
            catch (UAException uaException)
            {
                Console.WriteLine("*** Failure: {0}", uaException.GetBaseException().Message);
            }
        }
    }
}
// Shows how to write complex data with OPC UA Complex Data plug-in.
//
// Find all latest examples here : https://opclabs.doc-that.com/files/onlinedocs/OPCLabs-OpcStudio/Latest/examples.html .

class procedure WriteValue.Main;
var
  ArrayValueDataType: _UANodeDescriptor;
  ByteValue: _PrimitiveData;
  ByteValue2: _SequenceData;
  Client: _EasyUAClient;
  Element0, Element1: _PrimitiveData;
  EndpointDescriptor: string;
  GenericObject: _UAGenericObject;
  NodeDescriptor: string;
  ScalarValueDataType: _UANodeDescriptor;
  StructuredData: _StructuredData;
begin
  // Define which server and node we will work with.
  EndpointDescriptor := 
    //'http://opcua.demo-this.com:51211/UA/SampleServer';
    //'https://opcua.demo-this.com:51212/UA/SampleServer/';
    'opc.tcp://opcua.demo-this.com:51210/UA/SampleServer';
  NodeDescriptor := 'nsu=http://test.org/UA/Data/ ;i=10239';  // [ObjectsFolder]/Data.Static.Scalar.StructureValue

  // Instantiate the client object
  Client := CoEasyUAClient.Create;

  // Read a node which returns complex data.
  // We know that this node returns complex data, so we can type cast to UAGenericObject.
  WriteLn('Reading...');

  try
    GenericObject := _UAGenericObject(IUnknown(Client.ReadValue(EndpointDescriptor, NodeDescriptor)));
  except
    on E: EOleException do
    begin
      WriteLn(Format('*** Failure: %s', [E.GetBaseException.Message]));
      Exit;
    end;
  end;

  // Modify the data read.
  // This node returns one of the two data types, randomly (this is not common, usually the type is fixed). The
  // data types are sub-types of one common type which the data type of the node. We therefore use the data type
  // ID in the returned UAGenericObject to detect which data type has been returned.

  // For processing the internals of the data, refer to examples for GenericData and DataType classes.
  // We know how the data is structured, and have hard-coded a logic that modifies certain values inside. It is
  // also possible to discover the structure of the data type in the program, and write generic clients that can
  // cope with any kind of complex data.
  //
  // Note that the code below is not fully robust - it will throw an exception if the data is not as expected.

  WriteLn('Modifying...');
  WriteLn(GenericObject.DataTypeId.ToString);
  ScalarValueDataType := CoUANodeDescriptor.Create;
  ScalarValueDataType.NodeId.ExpandedText := 'nsu=http://test.org/UA/Data/ ;i=9440'; // ScalarValueDataType
  if GenericObject.DataTypeId.NodeDescriptor.Match(ScalarValueDataType) then
  begin
    // Negate the byte in the "ByteValue" field.
    StructuredData := IUnknown(GenericObject.GenericData) as _StructuredData;
    ByteValue := IUnknown(StructuredData.FieldData['ByteValue']) as _PrimitiveData;
    ByteValue.Value := Byte(not (Byte(byteValue.Value)));
    WriteLn(ByteValue.Value);
  end
  else
  begin
    ArrayValueDataType := CoUANodeDescriptor.Create;
    ArrayValueDataType.NodeId.ExpandedText := 'nsu=http://test.org/UA/Data/ ;i=9669'; // ArrayValueDataType
    if GenericObject.DataTypeId.Nodedescriptor.Match(ArrayValueDataType) then
    begin
      // Negate bytes at indexes 0 and 1 of the array in the "ByteValue" field.
      StructuredData := IUnknown(GenericObject.GenericData) as _StructuredData;
      ByteValue2 := IUnknown(StructuredData.FieldData['ByteValue']) as _SequenceData;
      Element0 := IUnknown(ByteValue2.Elements[0]) as _PrimitiveData;
      Element1 := IUnknown(ByteValue2.Elements[1]) as _PrimitiveData;
      Element0.Value := Byte(not (Byte(element0.Value)));
      Element1.Value := Byte(not (Byte(element1.Value)));
      WriteLn(Element0.Value);
      WriteLn(Element1.Value);
    end;
  end;

  // Write the modified complex data back to the node.
  // The data type ID in the UAGenericObject is borrowed without change from what we have read, so that the server
  // knows which data type we are writing. The data type ID not necessary if writing precisely the same data type
  // as the node has (not a subtype).
  WriteLn('Writing...');
  try
    Client.WriteValue(EndpointDescriptor, NodeDescriptor, GenericObject);
  except
    on E: EOleException do
    begin
      WriteLn(Format('*** Failure: %s', [E.GetBaseException.Message]));
      Exit;
    end;
  end;

end;
Requirements

Target Platforms: .NET Framework: Windows 10 (selected versions), Windows 11 (selected versions), Windows Server 2016, Windows Server 2022; .NET: Linux, macOS, Microsoft Windows

See Also