2

Can these two properties of a dropdown list in ASP.NET be used independently?

I wanted to retrieve a null value when the user selects some text; I couldn't as it retrieves the Text property whenever the Value is null. Eg:

l1 = new ListItem("Cat", null);
Console.WriteLine(l1.Value);

The output is

Cat

In another situation, when both the properties have different strings, I get the string in the Value property when I use the Text property. Eg:

l2 = new ListItem("Cat", "Mouse");
DropDownList ddl = new DropDownList();
ddl.Items.Add(li);
ddl.SelectedIndex = 0;
Console.WriteLine(ddl.SelectedValue);
Console.WriteLine(ddl.Text);

The output is

Mouse
Mouse

4
  • That sounds strange. Can you post a small working example of the problem you are experiencing?
    – Heinzi
    Mar 8, 2011 at 11:56
  • Point 1 is true - Text will be used if value is null, Point 2 sounds wrong - Text will be used if Text and Value are populated and you access Text Mar 8, 2011 at 11:58
  • @Heinzi: is it clear now? @longhairedsi: yeah its strange but i get the Value property when i access both Text and Value...
    – Harish
    Mar 8, 2011 at 12:18
  • Yes, it's clear now, thanks. The problem is that you are accessing the Text property of the DropDownList rather than the Text property of the ListItem. I've added a detailed explanation as an answer.
    – Heinzi
    Mar 8, 2011 at 12:30

2 Answers 2

2

Your observation is correct. Contrary to what intuition tells us, ListControl.Text (and, thus, DropDownList.Text) does not return the Text property of the currently selected ListItem. Here's an excerpt from the documentation:

ListControl.Text Property

Gets or sets the SelectedValue property of the ListControl control.

[...]

Remarks

The Text property gets and sets the same value that the SelectedValue property does.

To get the Text property of the selected ListItem, use SelectedItem to retrieve the currently selected list item and then access the Text property.

So, the behavior you are seeing is by design. Why did the .NET developers specify ListControl.Text in such an unintuitive way? I have no idea. Maybe it was necessary to support the ITextControl interface...

2
  • Yeah got it now, I can access the Text property by first retrieving the SelectedItem. Thanks. Damn right its counter-intuitive.
    – Harish
    Mar 8, 2011 at 12:35
  • I've added a question about the reason for this design decision: stackoverflow.com/questions/5232610. Maybe someone else knows more about this...
    – Heinzi
    Mar 8, 2011 at 12:44
0

Just set the value to some sentinel value like an empty string or some crazy string "JANDKJASD_" and handle it accordingly.

1
  • A sentinel would solve the first problem. What about the second? Plus, using an empty string again causes the Value property to be same as the Text property.
    – Harish
    Mar 8, 2011 at 12:20

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