How To Access Public Properties
Jun 14, 2010I have two pages page1.aspx and page2.aspx, both have code behind with partial classes. How do i access public property message on page1.aspx from page2.aspx ?
public string message { get; set; }
I have two pages page1.aspx and page2.aspx, both have code behind with partial classes. How do i access public property message on page1.aspx from page2.aspx ?
public string message { get; set; }
Why i can't access MasterPage's public property (MessagePlaceholder) from other Class (Errors) ?Error compiler gives me is "Error 1 The type or namespace name 'MyMasterPage' could not be found (are you missing a using directive or an assembly reference?)"my master page code behind
using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Linq;
using System.Web;
using System.Web.UI;
using System.Web.UI.WebControls;
public partial class MyMasterPage : System.Web.UI.MasterPage
{
public string MessagePlaceholder
[code]...
i have websrvice class in this i declared a webmethod and a public property my problem is i want to acess service class public property in my asp.net web application after creating proxy object.
service class:
[Code]....
Here's the scenario: A class based on System.Web.UI.Page has been created. A number of content pages derive from this class. All of these content pages use the same master page. The content pages define controls which need to access things on the master page (in code-behind). This is fine - no problem. In particular, each content page has its own data grid. The grid on each page has the same name, so that common code can reference it. In fact, some event handling for the grids on each content page is identical, so would like to factor that code to the base class. Interestingly, I can actually define the event handler entirely in the base class, with no stub in the content class at all, because the wire-up of event handlers uses the event-handler name defined in the grid, and that name happens to be found in the inherited base class. All good and dandy... very cool in fact. The problem comes when the code in the base class needs to access any of the common elements from the content page's master. Remember, the master is the same, and I know the type of the master. I would like to do something like this in the base-class code:
((myMasterType)this.Master).PropertyofMaster=xxx;
The problem is, that myMasterType - the type of the master page the content pages are using - is not available at compile time, at least not from a class definition for a base page. I've found articles that claim that the class name of the master is available - and it is, but not from a separate class. I CAN see it and compile with the master's class name from, for example, the code behind of the various content pages. But the actually class simply isn't available, it seems, from a pure class (the base page class). Judging from other times this question has been asked, here are common misunderstandings offered as solutions: 1. Use a page directive to declare the master type. This is not even vaguely a part of the problem, as the issue is not code in the content page, but in a separate base class which content pages inherit from. That base class is a pure class -- no .ASPX file at all. 2. Pass a reference to the master object from the content page to the base class. This can be done, but is pointless, because I can already get it, using "this.Master" from the base class! But because the type of the master is not available at compile time from the base class, it can't be passed from the content page either - unless it is passed with type MasterPage, thus losing all the properties/methods publically defined in the specific master page class. 3. Move the base page class out of the App_Code folder because the app_code folder is compiled before the other classes, and thus before the master page class. Doesn't work -- put the master page class file right in the same folder with these content pages and their master page, and the master page class is still not available at compile time from within the class. Re-summarized: Base page inherited by content pages. Content pages all use a common master page. Want to access the public properties of that master page from the base page, at runtime. Barrier is that I can find no way from within the base class to cast the master page object to the actual master page subclass being used.
I can access a module from code behind but not from the aspx page in inline VB code <% ... %>.
I know its got to be something simple but I can't seem to find the answer anywhere.
I have the following code in a class in which I call from different pages, I wanted to know where this info is being stored at as I can see it from different pages.
[Code]....
Also, is this saved on the browser session? IIS? will whatever being set from 1 user be affected by every other user on the site?
I have a very simple user control in my web site project which has public property declarations as following
[code].....
When i drag the ascx file to one of my aspx page and when i go to code behind of aspx page i can access the controls properties through intelisense, but when i run the project through visual studio i get error "The name 'uctTest1' does not exist in the current context?
This is the line where Error shows when i run the project uctTest.StartDate = DateTime.Now;
aspx page markup :
[code]....
Names of the private properties of a public class?
I have the following class
[Code]....
I have searched high and low (and very possibly could have missed it), but in my years of programming, I have always come across one practice that seemed to be the standard in OOP, which is to use private properties in an object with public methods to manipulate the data.
However, the more I delve into ASP.NET (specifically with MVC), the more public properties I see inside of classes (specifically models) such as the ones shown at Scottgu's blog discussing the Entity Framework.
Does it have something to do with the way that LINQ populates a class?
I have like 10 private members in my class, and I was hoping vs.net could create public properties from them but can't seem to find that option in VS.NET 2008.
Is there a feature for this?
I'm embarrassed to ask this here because it's clearly been duplicated several times already on StackOverflow. I've read a lot of stuff including:
[URL]
I think I've done exactly what those article say, but it's not working for me.
Here's the top of my master page, named "MasterNoNews.master":
[code]....
In the first case, VS is telling me System.Web.Ui.MasterPage does not contain a definition for urrentUser. In the second case, VS says the type or namespace 'MasterNoNews' could not be found.
My UI layer calls my business layer which populates a DTO. I need to display properties from the DTO on my ASPX page. Should I create public variables on the code behind page for each of the DTO properties and reference like <%=PublicPropertyName%> OR is it ok to set the DTO instance to public and reference the properties directly like <%=dtoInstance.propertyName%>
Additionally, would it be better if I just created Literal and Label controls for every item on the ASPX page and just populate them from the code behind only?
how can i access a public function in an .ascx file using C#?
View 3 Repliesi have 2 aspx files . I need to access a public function in b.aspx from a.aspx. How can i do that in asp.net using C#
My function from a.aspx is the following:
<script language="C#" runat="server">
public String user()
{
return l1.Text;
}
</script>
using the code below how come I cannot access a public method inside of a Site.Master page from a page using the Site.Master page:
Site.Master page:
[Code]....
I have a a public method in my code behind on the site.master page
[Code]....
I wish to call applyUserRole() from Default.aspx
On Default.aspx I have ..
[Code]....
[Code]....
Master. the method is not appearing. I've seen other post where people are having this issue but I can't find an answer.
I'm designing some reports to summarize recently compiled research findings. These reports are going to be posted on an ASP.NET page (via the report control) on the web site. I do not want to authenticate users, as the findings are meant to be public and requiring users to register and authenticate would add a barrier and is likely to decrease traffic.I've seen similar posts where reports are meant to be viewed by everyone on an intranet and permissions could be set using a designated workgroup. I need alternative solutions to the problem of making a report viewable by everyone who visits a site. I'm also currently unfamiliar with Kerberos (and I know that will probably pop up as a potential solution), so if there's a convenient way outside of that it would be great.
View 3 RepliesI have asp.net application deployed on local server what i want is to access application remotely through public(live)[We have one)..
View 5 RepliesI have a dll file that used in two separate projects, that contains a class for enumerations. In one of the projects I get empty string instead of the enum value from the below statement
View 1 RepliesI have this Internet web service page(webservice.asmx) being consumed jquery ajax call.
And I am hoping to restrict public request to this webservice other than request from local pages (aspx or jquery ajax call).
The web service checks for form-authentication before it gets executed but I just don't feel comfortable the .asmx page and list of services are viewable.
So users can't just type www.mysite.com/webservice.asmx to access my webservice.
I have a folder called <mysite>/Pages. This folder is PUBLICIn this folder I have a aspx page called : MySecure.aspx I have on the default.aspx page a hyperlink to the "~/Pages/MySecure.aspx page".I want to limit access to the MySecure page to only those in a Admin role (so no members no guests or www users can see it. I dont want to move MySecure.aspx into a secure folder.This is what I did in the wedconfig
<location path="Pages/MySecure.aspx">
<system.web>
<authorization>
[code]...
I have this public property in the codefile of an aspx page:
[Code]....
Then in that aspx page I have a usercontrol (.ascx), how can I access the above public property form its codebehind?
I need accessing the function in my masterpage.
I have a.master and b.aspx with the content page.
Now in the page load of my content page, I want to execute the an sql query which is in a function in my master page.
How can I access the function in my master page?
code in my master page:
public function info () as string
'SQL Query
end function
I am trying to declare a public property and access it from another page. I can't seem to be able to declare it. I'be tried putting in the code behind but it gives me errors.
View 2 RepliesI have a property on my Global.asax.cs class that I need to access from a business class, i.e. using HttpContext.Current. How do I do this? Global.asax.cs (in a web project)
public partial class Global : System.Web.HttpApplication
{
public static ProxyGenerator Generator = new ProxyGenerator();
Business class (in a separate business project)
var generator = ((Sei.Osp.Web.Global)HttpContext.Current.ApplicationInstance)
This obviously doesn't work and I don't want to reference the whole web project in the business project as it will create a circular reference (the business project is already referenced in the web project)
UPDATE:
To clarify - the property I'm creating holds an instance of the Castle Dynamic Proxy Generator class. I've read that you shouldn't just create this all over the place. So I thought I'd create it in my Global.asax.cs and then just use that instance wherever I need to create a proxy class (I'm using it to do AOP) Is there a better way of doing this?