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This week then weamp;#39;re going to be looking at writing our own custom attributes. So this leads on from a couple of videos that Iamp;#39;ve done previously on the built-in attributes in .NET and then on reflection. And in the reflection video, which was the last one I did, I showed you how to put together a general-purpose tool for creating reports from data structures. But the limitations of it were, because it was general purpose, it did them all in a very, very similar way. And what we needed to do was to be able to customize the way these reports came out - and thatamp;#39;s what weamp;#39;re going to do with custom attributes. And so just to recap, we had a couple of data structures. We had this Weather data structure with some dummy data; we had this Book data structure with some other dummy data. And then our CSVGenerator was a generic, so weamp;#39;re instantiating it for Book and for Weather and then it used reflection. So it got hold of