23

I want to 'echo' a string separated by delimeters like: sergio|tapia|1999|10am

the Body of an HTML page.

How can I achieve this? Thank you!

3 Answers 3

30

Use Response.Write(string).

There are a couple of shortcuts to Response.Write if you are trying to output on the page:

<%="sergio|tapia|1999|10am"%>

Or

<%:"sergio|tapia|1999|10am"%> (.NET 4.0)

See here for the different options.

5
  • For example say I response.write() twice. Are the both string output in separate lines? Or are they in a single html tag?
    – delete
    Jun 4, 2010 at 20:45
  • @Sergio Tapia - Depends where you output each one. Can't really tell you without seeing some code.
    – Oded
    Jun 4, 2010 at 20:46
  • 1
    Sergio, just try it. However, to create multiple lines you would need to add a "\n" at the end, and to make things show up on separate lines, consider using <br/>. Jun 4, 2010 at 20:47
  • @Sergio Using Response.Write twice will place the second string right after the first with no line break. Response.Write("Hello") followed by Response.Write("World") will output "HelloWorld".
    – Chad Levy
    Jun 4, 2010 at 20:50
  • Awesome. Thanks. Used it to force the client side browser to update style sheet everytime. Thank you so much good sir! Aug 15, 2013 at 12:07
6

You can use Response.Write(str) both in code-behind and on the .ASPX page:

<%
Response.Write(str)
%>

Using Response.Write() in code-behind places the string before the HTML of the page, so it's not always useful.

You can also create a server control somewhere on your ASPX page, such as a label or literal, and set the text or value of that control in code-behind:

.ASPX:

<asp:Label id="lblText" runat="server" />

Code-behind:

lblText.Text = "Hello world"

Outputs in HTML:

<span id="lblText">Hello World</span>

If you don't want <span>s added, use a literal:

<asp:Literal id="litText" runat="server" />

And set the value attribute of the literal instead of the text attribute:

litText.Value = "Hello World"
3

In the new Razor syntax, you can just write @variable in your html and its value will be echoed:

@{
    var name = 'Hiccup';
}

<p>Welcome @name</p>

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