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I can't find this info anywhere. Probably because Google is ignoring the keywords. Is there a difference between using <%: and <%= in your aspx page? They seem interchangeable.

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3 Answers 3

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<%: %> is a new thing in ASP.NET MVC 2. It is the same as <%= Html.Encode("Text") %>. It is recommended to always use <%: %> unless you have some specific reason to not do so (for example, you are rendering data from some file or database that's already been encoded).

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The difference is :

<%= "my <text>" %> will output my <text>, which is incorrect HTML

<%: "my <text>" %> will output my &lt;text&gt;, which is better

More details here

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@ntcolonel is right on the money. Additionally, for cases where your data has already been encoded, provide it using anything implementing IHtmlString. This prevents double-encoding, and allows you to always use <%: %>.

I believe that ASP.NET 4 shops should gravitate toward enforcing <%: %> by policy.

Also, the new syntax is for ASP.NET 4 in general; not necessarily just MVC, which is great news for WebForms developers.

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