show/hide this revision's text 2 more explanation

Having a heckuva time with this one, though I feel I'm missing something obvious. I have a control that inherits from System.Web.UI.WebControls.Button, and then implements an interface that I have set up. So think...

public class Button : System.Web.UI.WebControls.Button, IMyButtonInterface { ... }

In the codebehind of a page, I'd like to find all instances of this button from the ASPX. Because I don't really know what the type is going to be, just the interface it implements, that's all I have to go on when looping through the control tree. Thing is, I've never had to determine if an object uses an interface versus just testing its type. How can I loop through the control tree and yank anything that implements IMyButtonInterface in a clean way (Linq would be fine)?

Again, know it's something obvious, but just now started using interfaces heavily and I can't seem to focus my Google results enough to figure it out :)

Edit: GetType() returns the actual class, but doesn't return the interface, so I can't test on that (e.g., it'd return "MyNamespace.Button" instead of "IMyButtonInterface"). In trying to use "as" or "is" in a recursive function, the type parameter doesn't even get recognized within the function! It's rather bizarre. So

if(ctrl.GetType() == typeToFind) //ok

if(ctrl is typeToFind) //typeToFind isn't recognized! eh?

Definitely scratching my head over this one.

show/hide this revision's text 1

Finding controls that use a certain interface in ASP.NET

Having a heckuva time with this one, though I feel I'm missing something obvious. I have a control that inherits from System.Web.UI.WebControls.Button, and then implements an interface that I have set up. So think...

public class Button : System.Web.UI.WebControls.Button, IMyButtonInterface { ... }

In the codebehind of a page, I'd like to find all instances of this button from the ASPX. Because I don't really know what the type is going to be, just the interface it implements, that's all I have to go on when looping through the control tree. Thing is, I've never had to determine if an object uses an interface versus just testing its type. How can I loop through the control tree and yank anything that implements IMyButtonInterface in a clean way (Linq would be fine)?

Again, know it's something obvious, but just now started using interfaces heavily and I can't seem to focus my Google results enough to figure it out :)