Visual Studio :: HTML View Not Recognising Public Vars In Codebehind?
Feb 7, 2010
I'm using VS 2008 and can't seem to get intellisense to reconise Public variables declared in my codebehind.I start a new ASP.NET Web Application project, named something other than "WebApplication1". In my default.aspx.vb codebehind, I declare, say, "Public MyValue As Integer = 10", at the class level of course.Then, in my default.aspx page, within the body tag, I type "<%= myvalue %>"No mater what I try, it refuses to recognise "myvalue" as a valid variable name, however the code DOES compile and runs perfectly. Everything else seems to work fine.
I work in an development group in an enterprise, where we strive to seperate business units and their responsibilities. So for example, I am in the development group and we are responsible for all tasks related to developing applications. We have other roles such as dbas, or operational roles that are outside of our group and are responsible for things like deployment, server maintenance, etc.
I'm looking at features in VS such as the publish web app feature and the web.config transform feature and reading about them in blogs and various other places. Based on the majority of what I read it always seems that the writer is assuming that the developer is managing things like connection strings, user names, passwords for the different environments in web config transforms, then publishing to a remove server in some kind of production environment (be it live, or test or staging, etc).
An example is here. In our environment, and I assume others too, the scenario is somewhat more complex than is usually portrayed. The development group may not know where any of what they've developed is deployed. And administrators may move servers,databases etc and update configuration as characteristics of the environment dictate. So in these cases, how does web.config transforms help? Publish can still potentially be used locally to build artifacts for a deployment package but even you'd probably want to use some automated build manager instead.
So is publish and transforms really more suited for more rudimentary development processes where the barrier between development and operations is very grey? Or am I missing something? It just seems that a lot of things I've reading about this kind of thing have good intentions but are somewhat superficial in the context of a more defined development process.
Interested to know others opinions and experiences on this.
Every time I edit a resource file in VS, it regenerates the corresponding code and sets the class access modifier to internal.It's a pain to Ctrl-F -> ReplaceAll every time I edit the resx. Is there a property/setting so that I can default this to public?
internal class MyResource { internal static global::System.Resources.ResourceManager ResourceManager {...} }
I need all those internal to be public all the time.
I'm using Visual Studio 2008, and when I select/highlight something in design view and switch to source view it does not highlight and scroll to the selected item. This makes it really hard to change stuff in source view, and it's very inconvenient at worst
Split view and design view doesn't work.I installed and uninstalled Office 2003 and 2007 once but there's no office in my computer now.-I have Microsoft Studio Web Authoring Component installed.(12.0.4518.1066)(Uninstalled and installed it twice)-My computer-properties-Advenced system settings-environment variables-system variables-path is;
[code]... What is the problem,how can i fix it? I tried everything in other posts.
VWD 2008 Express. Windows 7 (64 bit). I want all my work and settings for VWD 2008 to be stored in the public (shared) documents folder. There are settings under Tools>Options to specify where projects and templates are stored, that is part of the answer. However, whenever I open VWD it always creates a "Visual Studio 2008" folder in my personal Documents folder where it apparently stores some settings. How can I make VWD work entirely in the "Visual Studio 2008" public folder for everything and NOT create the personal folder?
I've been manually adding the following line every time I create a new user control / web form in one of my ASP.NET web forms projects: Option Strict On. I can't just set it in web.config because it's a legacy project that has user controls / web forms that would bomb out if we turned on option strict for the entire site, so the current solution is to apply it to all new user controls / web forms and slowly update the older pages. Is there some sort of Visual Studio setting / template I can change so that "Option Strict On" is applied automatically when Visual Studio creates the codebehind files?
I want to see the design view while I am designing a site in ASP.NET using visual studio 2010 Ultimate, but I wondered there is no such option as design as there were in VS 2005 or VS 2008.
[URL] normally in the attached red portion below supposed to contain a option to switch to design view. But there is nothing ..
how to hide the name of the requested column when i show the data in an ASP.Net web application. problem is: i request some data from a sql table and show it on an asp.net webpage. now it shows the data but adds the column name in front (both in Listview and DataList). Like this: Columname: Data. How do i avoid the columnname been shown?
How can I set 'View Markup' (Source code) as the default when opening a content file in VS 2008? Currently it opens in Design mode which takes ages to load, and I never use it anyway.
I have a solution CPortal created in Visual Studio 2010. It has two Projects (CPporal and Login). If I right click the Login project folder and select 'View in Browser' It opens in IE as http://localhost:4558/Login/. If I rightclick the CPortal folder and select 'View in Browser it opens as http://localhost:1807/CPortal/. Please note the change in port number.
I am facing problem because, after I get myself authorized on the Login, it is is supposed to redirect me to CPortal, which it does, but uses the same port number that Login opened with. i.e. It redirects me to http://localhost:4558/CPortal/ and gives 404 file not found error. How do I make Visual Studio 2010 to use the same port number for both (all) projects so that this problem does not occur.
i have created a web project and i want to test it.when i click on debug or click on default page to view on browser , ASP.NET Web Development Server Works but nothing appear in my web browser . even i used internal browser ofVisual Studio 2008 but it shows this message :
While I am running a webpage by doing a right click on it and selecting 'View in Browser' in Visual Studio 2008; it popping up the following error:-
ERROR
The requested URL could not be retrieved While trying to retrieve the URL: /TestADO2/Default.aspx
The following error was encountered:
Invalid URL Some aspect of the requested URL is incorrect. Possible problems:
Missing or incorrect access protocol (should be `http://'' or similar) Missing hostname Illegal double-escape in the URL-Path Illegal character in hostname; underscores are not allowed Your cache administrator is webmaster.
Generated Tue, 17 Aug 2010 06:23:46 GMT by linux.site (squid/2.5.STABLE5)
Preconditions:-
1. My system is connected to a LAN which is accessing the internet through a webserver.
2. When we first time open a web browser it asks us to login to access the internet.