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This might be a really dumb question but I'm learning .NET, so I'm quite clueless...

Let's say I have two files default.aspx and the associated default.aspx.cs.

default.aspx.cs:

protected void Page_Load(object sender, EventArgs e)
        {
                 var myObject = new MyObject();
        }

Is there a way that in the default.aspx I could do something like:

<%= myObject.SomePropertyOfThisObject%>

... or something similar, without having to use databinders or something complicated like this? And if there's no way around binding the data, what would be the best way to do it?

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I don't quite understand what you're trying to do... – sebastian Jul 6 at 21:14
defining an object in my .cs and using it in my .aspx – marcgg Jul 6 at 21:21
That's kind of backwards for webforms. Get out of the habit of putting that kind of logic in your apsx code. Add a label or literal control instead. – Joel Coehoorn Jul 6 at 21:22
@Joel: is it really better practice to do so? Sometime it just makes my code much more complicated and messier (adding a litteral, and updating it when I could just access the object)... – marcgg Jul 6 at 21:25
Think in terms of the HTML you're trying to generate, then decide. But consider that a control can later be styled. It's not just a text string, splat, right there. – John Saunders Jul 6 at 21:26
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4 Answers

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You can, but you'll have to do it a bit differently. In your default.aspx.cs, add a member:

protected MyObject _myObject;

Then, in Page_Load:

    protected void Page_Load(object sender, EventArgs e)
    {
             _myObject = new MyObject();
    }

Then, in default.aspx, you can do:

<%= _myObject.SomePropertyOfThisObject %>

Of course, this assumes that class MyObject has a property named Awesome. You didn't mean the System.Object class, did you, since it doesn't have a property named Awesome.


Since your question was asking about the best way, I'll go further. The way I showed is not the best. The best is more often to use a data binding expression. If you don't like those, then you can set things in the codebehind:

    protected void Page_Load(object sender, EventArgs e)
    {
             _myObject = new MyObject();
            //
            _myLabel.Text = _myObject.SomePropertyOfThisObject;
    }

Assuming:

<asp:Label runat="server" id="_myLabel" />
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thanks, this is what I was going for! I edited the question to make it clearer about the kind of object I was accessing – marcgg Jul 6 at 21:23
and thanks also for putting the best practice along with the anwser to my question. – marcgg Jul 6 at 21:30
+1 - good answer – Scott Ivey Jul 6 at 21:36
Thanks, and thanks for the edit. – John Saunders Jul 6 at 21:44
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The <%= ... %> is ASPX short-hand for Response.Write( .... ).

If you change myObject to be strongly types (rather than just types as Object) you can certain use the line:

<%= myObject.Awesome %>

to emit a value.

Be aware, however, that the <%= syntax has limitations - specifically:

  • it cannot be used within HTML attribute as a value
  • it cannot emit server-side elements
  • it cannot be used within ASP UpdatePanels - you will get a exception when you perform a partial postback

You are probably better off creating a Label control on you page, and programmatically setting the Text property to the value. This also gives you more control over how value-to-string conversions are performed. And will work correctly with update panel controls.

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vote up 1 vote down

You can do any coding that you'd like to do directly in the ASPX file, rather than using codebehind. So, to accomplish what I think you want to do, you would have...

<some html>

<% var MyObject = new MyObject();
   Response.Write(myObj.Awesome()); %>

<some html>

However, this is really not recommended. Codebehind is the suggested "best practice" way of doing things, because this separates your code from your markup, which is fundamental in any good architecture. I would recommend using something like what John Saunders posted in order to avoid databinding, but you should really consider manipulating your controls in the codebehind using the lifecycle events rather than outputting object properties directly to your HTML. For example, if you were trying to output some text, then do something like

var literal = new LiteralControl(myObject.Awesome());
myPanel.Controls.Add(literal);
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vote up 0 vote down

Doesn't it have to be public to be accessible in that scope?

..

public var myObject = null;
protected void Page_Load(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
  myObject = new Object();
}
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protected is sufficient (same requirements as Page_Load has) – Frank Schwieterman Jul 6 at 21:38

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