What is the server side control used to add an H4 to the markup from the code behind?
4 Answers
var h4 = new HtmlGenericControl("h4");
h4.InnerHtml = "Heading Text";
parentControl.Controls.Add(h4);
I recommend creating an HtmlGenericControl
in your code-behind. The benefit of these over Literals is that they are proper HtmlControls, with the ability for you to programmatically set and modify properties such as InnerHtml
, CssClass
, Style
etc.
HtmlGenericControl myH4 = new HtmlGenericControl("h4")
{
ID = "myH4",
InnerHtml = "Your Heading Here"
});
yourContainerControl.Controls.Add(myH4);
You could use an asp:Literal
control - this just writes out the exact text that you set it to.
E.g:
Dim myLiteral as Literal = new Literal()
myLiteral.Text = "<h4>My Heading</h4>"
Then add your Literal to the page.
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I need it to be an H4 in the actual HTML source code, though, not just there. Jul 25, 2011 at 13:47
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It will write out an actual <h4> tag in the source as rendered to the browser. Do you mean that you want the <h4> tag to be in your aspx code along with your other server tags? Jul 25, 2011 at 13:50
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In your aspx code have <asp:Literal runat="server" id="myLiteral" /> then like above use myLiteral.Text = "<h4>My Heading</h4>"; in the code behind– DaveJul 25, 2011 at 13:53
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If you're going to use a
Literal
, it would still be better to leave the<h4>
in the markup. So, have the markup as<h4><asp:Literal ID="HeaderText" runat="server" /></h4>
. Jul 25, 2011 at 13:53 -
There is nothing like a <asp:H4 />
control. However, you can add any HTML element to a page via HtmlGenericControl
type in your code behind.
For example, to create it:
HtmlGenericControl headerControl = new HtmlGenericControl(HtmlTextWriterTag.H4.ToString());
headerControl.ID = "myHeader";
headerControl.InnerHtml = "Hello World";
placeHolder.Controls.Add(headerControl);
To access it from code behind later:
HtmlGenericControl headerControl = FindControl("myHeader") as HtmlGenericControl;
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If you give an
id
and arunat="server"
to an element, it should just be another property of the page object, just like a normal ASP.Net control (e.g. Label). So instead of usingFindControl
, you can just dothis.myHeader
. Jul 25, 2011 at 13:52 -