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I am reading a book called "Professional ADO.NET 3.5 with LINQ" and when I want to execute one of the codes, Visual Studio cannot resolve "ProcessesGridView". The code is :

ProcessesGridView.DataSource = procs;

Default.aspx:

<div>
        <asp:GridView ID="ProcessesGridView" runat="server" CellPadding="4" ForeColor="#333333" 

        </asp:GridView>
    </div>

and the code behind file:

var procs = (from proc in Process.GetProcesses()
                     where proc.Threads.Count > 10
                     orderby proc.WorkingSet64 descending
                     select new
                     {
                         proc.ProcessName,
                         Memory = proc.WorkingSet64,
                         Threads = proc.Threads.Count
                     }).ToList();
        ProcessesGridView.DataSource = procs;
        ProcessesGridView.DataBind();
    }
}
6
  • 2
    You should have an object with "ProcessesGridView" id in your form.
    – dario
    Jan 16, 2015 at 12:59
  • yes there is an id="ProcessesGridView" in the view file but no idea why cannot connect to code behind file. Jan 16, 2015 at 13:01
  • I just copy/past the code in VS Jan 16, 2015 at 13:01
  • Try to rebuild the solution.
    – dario
    Jan 16, 2015 at 13:02
  • What exactly is the exception? Please add aspx code to the question also. Jan 16, 2015 at 13:06

2 Answers 2

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Have a look at this link which explains and elaborates the concept of the designer code, and the code behind.

You would need to have an object named ProcessesGridView in your .ASPX designer file, such as the following;

   <asp:gridview id="ProcessesGridView" 
        autogeneratecolumns="true" 
        runat="server">
      </asp:gridview>

You would then need to bind the results to the grid view in your code behind, like the following;

 ProcessesGridView.DataSource = ds;
 ProcessesGridView.DataBind();

If the code doesn't compile try cleaning the solution and rebuilding again. See also the following link.

You can also check that the gridview has a reference in the designer.cs file

protected global :: System.Web.UI.WebControls.GridView ProcessesGridView;
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It seems taht ProcessesGridView is a kind of UserControl. Do you have declared the user control with the name ProcessesGridView in WinForms or WPF? Do you have created an instance for ProcessesGridView?

If ProcessesGridView does not exists, it seems not to be declared.

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