3

First of all, I have no experiences with ASP.NET WebForms. However, I inherited a very old WebForm application where I have to do maintenance from time to time. This is such a situation:

There is a user control that has private instance variables. The problem is, that the values of these instance variables get lost, most likely after page reload. What I found out so far is, that it seems that the control class gets recreated frequently. What would be helpful, would be answers to the following questions:

  • Do WebForm User Controls do maintain a state?
  • If yes, how is it done in general (pointers to online resources for details appreciated)
  • If no, can it be implemented somehow? Any samples?

1 Answer 1

5

Probably the most common way to maintain state is to use ViewState rather than private instance fields. For example, if your UserControl contains a property Text, you can define it as follows:

public string Text
{
    get { return (string) ViewState["Text"]; }
    set { ViewState["Text"] = value; }
}

You can also delegate a property to a child control. In this case the child control will maintain ViewState for you (provided EnableViewState is true). For example:

public string Text
{
    get { return MyTextBox.Text; }
    set { MyTextBox.Text = value; }
}

Google for ViewState for more info. There are pitfalls and it's a good idea to understand it thoroughly.

2
  • Cool, thanks for the fast answer. So my suspicion was right, that UserControls do not maintain state. Would it be a good alternative to store my transient data in the users session object?
    – Andreas
    Jun 14, 2012 at 9:43
  • "Would it be a good alternative to store my transient data in the users session object" - the only answer is "it depends". There are trade-offs for all the options for maintaining state (e.g. querystring values, cookies, ViewState, Session, ASP.NET Cache, server-side database). This article is a good starting point: msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/y5y3c2c5(v=vs.85).aspx
    – Joe
    Jun 14, 2012 at 10:02

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