30

I just inherited a web site that was created by a designer. The site was originally created with all *.html files. The designer renamed all the *.html files to *.aspx files. Hence there are no aspx.cs files created. I pulled the site into a new VS2012 solution. My question is, is there a way in VS 2010 to automatically create the code behind files for a an existing stand alone aspx file?

2
  • You can't, not really - just renaming a HTML file does not an ASPX make - you need the declaring header at the top, for example, which references the class, code behind etc. It would be easier to rename the files back and then just add new ASPX pages and copy the HTML into those. How many files do you have?
    – dash
    Mar 19, 2012 at 12:54
  • A tool to automate this would be awesome.
    – Myster
    Dec 10, 2012 at 4:47

5 Answers 5

26

I don't know of an automated way to do this, but if there is no server side code in the existing *.aspx files then it should just be a case of adding the .cs codebehind files and then wiring them up in the <%@ Page tag like so:

<%@ Page Title="YourPageTitle" Language="C#" AutoEventWireup="true" CodeBehind="YourPage.aspx.cs" Inherits="YourNamespace.YourPage" %>

Note: This will not create the YourPage.aspx.designer.cs file. (I usually delete these anyway as they cause merge issues - i find it easier to add the controls i need to reference to my code-behind file manually.)

The other alternative is to just create a new "Web Form" for each page with the correct names and then copy and paste the existing markup into them. If you do have server code in the existing *.aspx files then you will need to manually copy it to the code-behind.

3
  • Sounds like the only way to do it is manually creating the files. Sounds like one for the suggestion box. Mar 22, 2012 at 19:46
  • 1
    @MikeMurphy Yeah, I had a look through a few of the VS2010 extensions like VSCommands and Productivity Power Tools. I'm still not convinced they can't help with this, but i couldn't find anything in my initial search. If you have more time than i did to search, i'm pretty sure you could find something that does what you need. Failing that you could always create your own extension?
    – Robbie
    Mar 22, 2012 at 19:54
  • If you have ReSharper installed, it will do the job for you.
    – vgaltes
    Feb 19, 2015 at 16:27
9

Based on what I found here: http://forums.asp.net/t/1229894.aspx/1

  1. Right click on your solution explorer.
  2. Add New Item -> Class File.
  3. Name the file as the name of your aspx eg: Default.aspx.cs
  4. When it asks you the file should be in app_code click "no".
  5. In your aspx in page attribute add

    AutoEventWireup="true" CodeFile="Default.aspx.cs" Inherits="Default"
    
  6. Similarly in your class file that you just added remove everything. Your class should look like this:

    //all namespaces go here
    
    
    public partial class Default : System.Web.UI.Page
    {
        protected void Page_Load(object sender, EventArgs e)
        {
        }
    }
    
2
  • Why Default? Shouldn't it be the name of whatever page you are creating? Surely you'll have hundreds of these pages Shouldn't the code behinds all be different? Would it not then be the name of the webpage in both cases (the cs file and the aspx page?
    – ggb667
    Nov 22, 2014 at 0:49
  • 1
    Default is just used as an example. Feel free to clean it up if you can. Nov 22, 2014 at 8:50
5

After you add the new .cs file, you may want to see the file look like a codebehind file (indented, icon, etc). To do so:

  1. Unload the project
  2. Edit the project
  3. Find the new filename (file.aspx.cs) in the section with files.
  4. Add an xml node for DependentUpon.
  5. Save and Close the project
  6. Reload the project

For a file Profile.aspx.cs, the xml should look something like this:

<Compile Include="Profile.aspx.cs">
  <DependentUpon>Profile.aspx</DependentUpon>
  <SubType>ASPXCodeBehind</SubType>
</Compile>
1
  • For me, I just closed Visual Studio, edited the Project, and re-opened the Solution. Thanks for the reminder on where the CS and ASPX are linked.
    – Michael
    Feb 11, 2018 at 22:07
4

In Visual Studio 2012: Right click on the project --> click Add --> click Web Form --> Copy the content of your original aspx file into the new WebForm aspx --> delete the original aspx file --> Rename the new one to anything you want. Now you should have a new aspx file with a code behind file that is ready for use

2

To save yourself from the drama of manually editing the project file like David Frette details, I suggest you remove the file from the project and create a new file with the same name with a code-behind. Then copy-paste the contents of the original aspx or ascx to the new files.

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