The HTML/JavaScript code runs in the browser and the ASP code runs on the server, quite possibly on two completely different computers.
Also, the browser runs JavaScript and that is entirely incompatible with ASP.
That means one thing: You can't call any ASP functions from HTML. End of story.
The interface to communicate with a web server is: HTTP messages. In other words, only by requesting URLs you can inform the server of actions on the client.
So the first thing you need to do is determine how you want to communicate your intent to the server, i.e. how the URL should look like.
How about:
http://yourserver.com/yourpage.asp?page=next
http://yourserver.com/yourpage.asp?page=prev
http://yourserver.com/yourpage.asp?page=5
Now that we decided on the URL, make the ASP page understand it. URL parameters are available in the Request
collection.
<%
Option Explicit ' never work without Option Explicit
Dim page, requestedPage, MAX_PAGE
requestedPage = LCase(Request("page"))
MAX_PAGE = 10
If requestedPage = "next" Then
page = NextPage()
ElseIf requestedPage = "prev" Then
page = PrevPage()
Else
page = SetPage(requestedPage)
End
%>
Now your ASP code has an idea what to do with the "page" URL parameter.
Let's define the functions that do the page actual switching.
<%
Function CurrentPage
If IsNumeric(Session("page")) Then
CurrentPage = Session("page")
Else
CurrentPage = 1
End If
End Function
Function NextPage
NextPage = SetPage(CurrentPage() + 1)
End Function
Function PrevPage
PrevPage = SetPage(CurrentPage() - 1)
End Function
Function SetPage(newPage)
' range check!
If Not IsNumeric(newPage) Then
Session("page") = 1
ElseIf page < 1 Then
Session("page") = 1
ElseIf page > MAX_PAGE Then
Session("page") = MAX_PAGE
Else
Session("page") = Int(newPage)
EndIf
SetPage = Session("page")
End Function
%>
The easiest way to send an HTTP message to the server ("to request an URL") is with a link. So your HTML could look like this:
<a href="/yourpage.asp?page=prev">Previous Page</a>
<a href="/yourpage.asp?page=5">Page 5</a>
<a href="/yourpage.asp?page=next">Next Page</a>
Your remaining tasks:
- Output an actual page of content, of course.
- Figure out how to output more links than just
Page 5
.
- Figure out how to set
MAX_PAGE
to something more appropriate than 10
.
- Figure out how to use different page sizes.
- And finally: Think about dropping the entire "current"/"next"/"prev" page concept. Every page of data is uniquely addressable with its URL. If you are on
http://yourserver.com/yourpage.asp?page=5
, it follows naturally what the previous and the next pages are - 4 and 6. Figure out a way to do page switching entirely via URL parameters and without any session or cookie value.