Why is it that in .aspx pages all events are preceded with "On
" e.g. "OnClick
", "OnCommand
" and in the code-behind file they are referred "Click
", "Command
"? Just Naming Convention or is there some logical explanation?
3 Answers
The names of the events themselves are Click, Change, etc... The internal methods to fire those events from code are prefixed with "On" as a naming convention. In ASP.NET markup, you use the attribute OnClick but what you're really doing is wiring a method to the "Click" event. Therefore, the method autogenerated for you by VS is ButtonName_Click. This method is internally passed as a delegate to the event itself.
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On Click, do the Click Method. I guess one could called it
Button1_Clicked
method, for more accuracy. May 12, 2010 at 17:49
AFAIK, just naming convention. They had to start with something :-) Prior to ASP.NET I think it was also like this in Windows applications and in JavaScript.
http://www.c-sharpcorner.com/UploadFile/puranindia/165/
http://webdevelopersjournal.com/articles/jsevents1/jsevents1.html
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Just a name convention that follows VB style. Interesting that Delphi/VCL convention is just the opposite.– Lex LiJan 24, 2010 at 12:32
I may have your question wrong, but from what I can tell by what your asking, the EVENT and the PROPERTY cannot have the same name
The event is "Click"... example.
Protected Sub Button1_Click(ByVal sender As Object, ByVal e As System.EventArgs) Handles Button1.Click
But in the actual control, there is a property called "OnClick" whereby it activates the "Click" event. Therefor they cannot be named the same thing.