How can I add and read the value from web.config file?
6 Answers
Given the following web.config:
<appSettings>
<add key="ClientId" value="127605460617602"/>
<add key="RedirectUrl" value="http://localhost:49548/Redirect.aspx"/>
</appSettings>
Example usage:
using System.Configuration;
string clientId = ConfigurationManager.AppSettings["ClientId"];
string redirectUrl = ConfigurationManager.AppSettings["RedirectUrl"];
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18+1 nice answer. However one note - you don't need to call
ToString
explicitly, as indexers onAppSettings
return value of typestring
themselves– horghNov 7, 2013 at 0:36
I would suggest you to don't modify web.config from your, because every time when change, it will restart your application.
However you can read web.config using System.Configuration.ConfigurationManager.AppSettings
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Thank You Mr.Muhammed , so what you advice me to do to save a variable in a public place that can be changed without restating the web application ? Thanks in Advance Oct 4, 2010 at 11:41
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2
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2yes, XML file is the better idea. Or you can store it in DB and add in application_start (Global.asax), put it in application variable and use these in application. these variable assign only once in the application and if your application restart, these will assigned again. Oct 4, 2010 at 12:31
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1Thank you very much Mr.Vamyip and Mr.Muhammed for your help Oct 4, 2010 at 12:48
If you want the basics, you can access the keys via:
string myKey = System.Configuration.ConfigurationManager.AppSettings["myKey"].ToString();
string imageFolder = System.Configuration.ConfigurationManager.AppSettings["imageFolder"].ToString();
To access my web config keys I always make a static class in my application. It means I can access them wherever I require and I'm not using the strings all over my application (if it changes in the web config I'd have to go through all the occurrences changing them). Here's a sample:
using System.Configuration;
public static class AppSettingsGet
{
public static string myKey
{
get { return ConfigurationManager.AppSettings["myKey"].ToString(); }
}
public static string imageFolder
{
get { return ConfigurationManager.AppSettings["imageFolder"].ToString(); }
}
// I also get my connection string from here
public static string ConnectionString
{
get { return ConfigurationManager.ConnectionStrings["ConnectionString"].ConnectionString; }
}
}
Assuming the key is contained inside the <appSettings>
node:
ConfigurationSettings.AppSettings["theKey"];
As for "writing" - put simply, dont.
The web.config is not designed for that, if you're going to be changing a value constantly, put it in a static helper class.
Ryan Farley has a great post about this in his blog, including all the reasons why not to write back into web.config files: Writing to Your .NET Application's Config File
I am siteConfiguration class for calling all my appSetting like this way. I share it if it will help anyone.
add the following code at the "web.config"
<configuration>
<configSections>
<!-- some stuff omitted here -->
</configSections>
<appSettings>
<add key="appKeyString" value="abc" />
<add key="appKeyInt" value="123" />
</appSettings>
</configuration>
Now you can define a class for getting all your appSetting value. like this
using System;
using System.Configuration;
namespace Configuration
{
public static class SiteConfigurationReader
{
public static String appKeyString //for string type value
{
get
{
return ConfigurationManager.AppSettings.Get("appKeyString");
}
}
public static Int32 appKeyInt //to get integer value
{
get
{
return ConfigurationManager.AppSettings.Get("appKeyInt").ToInteger(true);
}
}
// you can also get the app setting by passing the key
public static Int32 GetAppSettingsInteger(string keyName)
{
try
{
return Convert.ToInt32(ConfigurationManager.AppSettings.Get(keyName));
}
catch
{
return 0;
}
}
}
}
Now add the reference of previous class and to access a key call like bellow
string appKeyStringVal= SiteConfigurationReader.appKeyString;
int appKeyIntVal= SiteConfigurationReader.appKeyInt;
int appKeyStringByPassingKey = SiteConfigurationReader.GetAppSettingsInteger("appKeyInt");