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By default, button controls in ASP.NET pages post back to the same page that contains the button, where you can write an event handler for the post. In most cases this is the desired behavior, but occasionaly you will also want to be able to post to another page in your application. The Server.
Transfer method can be used to move between pages, however the URL doesn't change. Instead, the cross page posting feature in ASP.NET 2.0 allows you to fire a normal post back to a different page in the application. In the target page, you can then access the values of server controls in the source page that initiated the post back.
To use cross page posting, you can set the PostBackUrl property of a Button, LinkButton or ImageButton control, which specifies the target page. In the target page, you can then access the PreviousPage property to retrieve values from the source page.
By default, the PreviousPage property is of type Page, so you must access controls using the FindControl method. You can also enable strongly-typed access to the source page by setting the @PreviousPageType directive in the target page to the virtual path or Type name of the source page.
Here is a step-by-step guide for implementing the cross-page post back using controls that implement the IButtonControl interface.
Create a Web Form and insert a Button control on it using the VS .NET designer.
Set the button's PostBackUrl property to the Web Form you want to post back. For instance in this case it is "nextpage.aspx"
When the PostBackUrl property of the IButtonControl is set, the ASP.NET framework binds the corresponding HTML element to new JavaScript function named WebForm_DoPostBackWithOptions.
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By default, button controls in ASP.NET pages post back to the same page that contains the button, where you can write an event handler for the post. In most cases this is the desired behavior, but occasionaly you will also want to be able to post to another page in your application. The Server.
Transfer method can be used to move between pages, however the URL doesn't change. Instead, the cross page posting feature in ASP.NET 2.0 allows you to fire a normal post back to a different page in the application. In the target page, you can then access the values of server controls in the source page that initiated the post back.
To use cross page posting, you can set the PostBackUrl property of a Button, LinkButton or ImageButton control, which specifies the target page. In the target page, you can then access the PreviousPage property to retrieve values from the source page.
By default, the PreviousPage property is of type Page, so you must access controls using the FindControl method. You can also enable strongly-typed access to the source page by setting the @PreviousPageType directive in the target page to the virtual path or Type name of the source page.
Here is a step-by-step guide for implementing the cross-page post back using controls that implement the IButtonControl interface.
Create a Web Form and insert a Button control on it using the VS .NET designer.
Set the button's PostBackUrl property to the Web Form you want to post back. For instance in this case it is "nextpage.aspx"
When the PostBackUrl property of the IButtonControl is set, the ASP.NET framework binds the corresponding HTML element to new JavaScript function named WebForm_DoPostBackWithOptions.
RELATED POST
C SHARP INTRODUCTION
C SHARP OUT LOOK
DOT NET AND C SHARP
C SHARP APPLICATION STRICTURE
OOPS INTRODUCTION
OOPS AND C SHARP
IDE AND C SHARP
INSTANTIATING OBJECTS IN C SHARP
CLASSES AND OBJECTS IN C SHARP
OPERATORS IN C SHARP
SWITCH AND ITERATION IN C SHARP
BRANCHING IN C SHARP
CONSTANTS AND STRING
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