3

I should know this by now, but I don't, and for some reason, I am not finding the answer on Google, so I thought I'd try here.

I know that <%= %> is the equivalent of Response.Write()

And I've seen <%# %> for databinding.

However, today I noticed something new, and even though I can see what it's doing, I am looking for the official documentation on this. In one of my web pages, I see

ConnectionString="<%$ ConnectionStrings:SomeConnectionString %>"

So what does <%$ %> do?

2
  • Thank you to all who answered. Both @Thomas Jaskula and @Joewl Coehoorn's answers were good and helpful, and got voted up, and I had a hard time choosing which to accept. I decided to use @Thomas' answer because if the link I was looking for. Thank you both!
    – David
    Feb 4, 2010 at 17:28
  • possible duplicate of <%$, <%@, <%=, <%#...what's the deal?
    – ChrisF
    Sep 15, 2011 at 21:15

3 Answers 3

7

See this question:
In ASP.Net, what is the difference between <%= and <%#

In summary ,there are a several different 'bee-stings':

  • <%@ - Page/Control/Import/Register directive
  • <%$ - Resource access and Expression building
  • <%= - Explicit output to page, equivalent to <% Response.Write( ) %>
  • <%# - Data Binding. It can only used where databinding is supported, or at the page level if you call Page.DataBind() in your code-behind.
  • <%-- - Server-side comment block
  • <%: - Equivalent to <%=, but it also HTMLEncode()s the output.
5

Used for expressions, not code; often seen with DataSources

http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/d5bd1tad.aspx

0

It's markup used to evaluate expressions rather than code.

2
  • I would like to vote this up just because you took the effort and it's technically accurate. However, it's not particularly helpful without further explanation.
    – David
    Feb 4, 2010 at 17:30
  • Eh, I thought about deleting it. I ended my typing when the "1 new answer" popup came up. I hit the add button and it turns out the guy before me answered already so I didn't bother finishing. Feb 4, 2010 at 17:36

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