63

I have an ASP.NET linkbutton control on my form. I would like to use it for javascript on the client side and prevent it from posting back to the server. (I'd like to use the linkbutton control so I can skin it and disable it in some cases, so a straight up tag is not preferred).

How do I prevent it from posting back to the server?

17 Answers 17

67

ASPX code:

<asp:LinkButton ID="someID" runat="server" Text="clicky"></asp:LinkButton>

Code behind:

public partial class _Default : System.Web.UI.Page 
{
    protected void Page_Load(object sender, EventArgs e)
    {
        someID.Attributes.Add("onClick", "return false;");
    }
}

What renders as HTML is:

<a onclick="return false;" id="someID" href="javascript:__doPostBack('someID','')">clicky</a>

In this case, what happens is the onclick functionality becomes your validator. If it is false, the "href" link is not executed; however, if it is true the href will get executed. This eliminates your post back.

2
  • 1
    <asp:LinkButton ID="LinkButton5" runat="server" OnClick="A_Click" CssClass="linkOff" Text="Edit"></asp:LinkButton> and adding the above, when clicking nothing happens :/ Apr 8, 2015 at 18:21
  • perfect, been struggling with this for a while as didn't want the __postback called instead called some JS. much appreciated.
    – Andrew
    May 1, 2020 at 9:18
39

This may sound like an unhelpful answer ... But why are you using a LinkButton for something purely client-side? Use a standard HTML anchor tag and set its onclick action to your Javascript.

If you need the server to generate the text of that link, then use an asp:Label as the content between the anchor's start and end tags.

If you need to dynamically change the script behavior based on server-side code, consider asp:Literal as a technique.

But unless you're doing server-side activity from the Click event of the LinkButton, there just doesn't seem to be much point to using it here.

5
  • I agree. Primarily, I want to use a skin I've already created for linkbuttons used elsewhere.
    – y0mbo
    Oct 7, 2008 at 2:32
  • Can you not modify the skin, or base the styles for the given anchor off those used in the skin?
    – John Rudy
    Oct 7, 2008 at 10:58
  • 2
    You might favor a linkbutton even if server postback is disabled when: 1) You still desire the benefit of a control implementing INamingContainer. Example, you have multiple user controls on a page where each contains a LinkButton that needs a unique ID. 2) You want to keep asp client validation.
    – John Grant
    Oct 24, 2008 at 18:55
  • 1
    Also, sometimes LinkButtons are used as a target control for an ajax extender control Oct 31, 2013 at 2:12
  • You may want this to dynamically generate the buttons. However you can use new HtmlGenericControl()
    – FalcoGer
    Jan 23, 2019 at 16:19
27

You can do it too

...LinkButton ID="BtnForgotPassword" runat="server" OnClientClick="ChangeText('1');return false"...

And it stop the link button postback

1
  • It works, but the problem is, if you have some operation going on such as deleting the record after modal pop-up, this doesn't work at all. It just simply refreshes the page. Nothing else.
    – Rohan Rao
    Oct 5, 2019 at 8:06
15

Just set href="#"

<asp:LinkButton ID="myLink" runat="server" href="#">Click Me</asp:LinkButton>
1
  • from what i tested, this will cause the page scrolls up the top.
    – Yang You
    Dec 9, 2019 at 2:48
6

I think you should investigate using a HyperLink control. It's a server-side control (so you can manipulate visibility and such from code), but it omits a regular ol' anchor tag and doesn't cause a postback.

6

Just been through this, the correct way to do it is to use:

  1. OnClientClick
  2. return false

as in the following example line of code:

<asp:LinkButton ID="lbtnNext" runat="server" OnClientClick="findAllOccurences(); return false;" />
4

In C#, you'd do something like this:

MyButton.Attributes.Add("onclick", "put your javascript here including... return false;");
2

To avoid refresh of page, if the return false is not working with asp:LinkButton use

href="javascript: void;"

or

href="#"

along with OnClientClick="return false;"

<asp:LinkButton ID="linkPrint" runat="server" CausesValidation="False" href="javascript: void;"
        OnClientClick="javascript:self.print();return false;">Print</asp:LinkButton>

Above is code will call the browser print without refresh the page.

1

call java script function on onclick event.

1

Instead of implement the attribute:

public partial class _Default : System.Web.UI.Page{
 protected void Page_Load(object sender, EventArgs e)
 {
    someID.Attributes.Add("onClick", "return false;");
 }}

Use:

OnClientClick="return false;"

inside of asp:LinkButton tag

1

Something else you can do, if you want to preserve your scroll position is this:

<asp:LinkButton runat="server" id="someId" href="javascript: void;" Text="Click Me" />
0

Why not use an empty ajax update panel and wire the linkbutton's click event to it? This way only the update panel will get updated, thus avoiding a postback and allowing you to run your javascript

0

Have you tried to use the OnClientClick?

var myLinkButton = new LinkButton { Text = "Click Here", OnClientClick = "JavaScript: return false;" };

<asp:LinkButton ID="someID" runat="server" Text="clicky" OnClientClick="JavaScript: return false;"></asp:LinkButton>
0

In the jquery ready function you can do something like below -

var hrefcode = $('a[id*=linkbutton]').attr('href').split(':');
var onclickcode = "javascript: if`(Condition()) {" + hrefcode[1] + ";}";
$('a[id*=linkbutton]').attr('href', onclickcode);
1
  • 1
    Welcome to StackOverflow! Since the OP did not mention JQuery, your answer is slightly off-topic. To make the answer better, you could include additional context about how to incorporate JQuery here. On the other hand, since the question was asked and answered (many times) 5 years ago, only very on-topic answers would be useful at this point.
    – dg99
    Jan 29, 2014 at 20:21
-1

You might also want to have the client-side function return false.

<asp:LinkButton runat="server" id="button" Text="Click Me" OnClick="myfunction();return false;" AutoPostBack="false" />

You might also consider:

<span runat="server" id="clickableSpan" onclick="myfunction();" class="clickable">Click Me</span>

I use the clickable class to set things like pointer, color, etc. so that its appearance is similar to an anchor tag, but I don't have to worry about it getting posted back or having to do the href="javascript:void(0);" trick.

1
  • 2
    OnClick binds the server-side event, not the client side event. onclientclick is the client event Oct 7, 2008 at 2:21
-1

use html link instead of asp link and you can use label in between html link for server side control

-1

No one seems to be doing it like this:

createEventLinkButton.Attributes.Add("onClick", " if (this.innerHTML == 'Please Wait') { return false; } else {  this.innerHTML='Please Wait'; }");

This seems to be the only way that works.

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