Better way to find control in ASP.NET
I have a complex asp.net form,having even 50 to 60 fields in one form like there is Multiview
, inside MultiView I have a GridView
, and inside GridView I have several CheckBoxes
.
Currently I am using c开发者_Python百科haining of the FindControl()
method and retrieving the child ID.
Now, my question is that is there any other way/solution to find the nested control in ASP.NET.
If you're looking for a specific type of control you could use a recursive loop like this one - http://weblogs.asp.net/eporter/archive/2007/02/24/asp-net-findcontrol-recursive-with-generics.aspx
Here's an example I made that returns all controls of the given type
/// <summary>
/// Finds all controls of type T stores them in FoundControls
/// </summary>
/// <typeparam name="T"></typeparam>
private class ControlFinder<T> where T : Control
{
private readonly List<T> _foundControls = new List<T>();
public IEnumerable<T> FoundControls
{
get { return _foundControls; }
}
public void FindChildControlsRecursive(Control control)
{
foreach (Control childControl in control.Controls)
{
if (childControl.GetType() == typeof(T))
{
_foundControls.Add((T)childControl);
}
else
{
FindChildControlsRecursive(childControl);
}
}
}
}
Late as usual. If anyone is still interested in this there are a number of related SO questions and answers. My version of recursive extension method for resolving this:
public static IEnumerable<T> FindControlsOfType<T>(this Control parent)
where T : Control
{
foreach (Control child in parent.Controls)
{
if (child is T)
{
yield return (T)child;
}
else if (child.Controls.Count > 0)
{
foreach (T grandChild in child.FindControlsOfType<T>())
{
yield return grandChild;
}
}
}
}
All the highlighted solutions are using recursion (which is performance costly). Here is cleaner way without recursion:
public T GetControlByType<T>(Control root, Func<T, bool> predicate = null) where T : Control
{
if (root == null) {
throw new ArgumentNullException("root");
}
var stack = new Stack<Control>(new Control[] { root });
while (stack.Count > 0) {
var control = stack.Pop();
T match = control as T;
if (match != null && (predicate == null || predicate(match))) {
return match;
}
foreach (Control childControl in control.Controls) {
stack.Push(childControl);
}
}
return default(T);
}
FindControl does not search within nested controls recursively. It does only find controls that's NamigContainer is the Control on that you are calling FindControl.
Theres a reason that ASP.Net does not look into your nested controls recursively by default:
- Performance
- Avoiding errors
- Reusability
Consider you want to encapsulate your GridViews, Formviews, UserControls etc. inside of other UserControls for reusability reasons. If you would have implemented all logic in your page and accessed these controls with recursive loops, it'll very difficult to refactor that. If you have implemented your logic and access methods via the event-handlers(f.e. RowDataBound of GridView), it'll be much simpler and less error-prone.
Action Management On Controls
Create below class in base class. Class To get all controls:
public static class ControlExtensions
{
public static IEnumerable<T> GetAllControlsOfType<T>(this Control parent) where T : Control
{
var result = new List<T>();
foreach (Control control in parent.Controls)
{
if (control is T)
{
result.Add((T)control);
}
if (control.HasControls())
{
result.AddRange(control.GetAllControlsOfType<T>());
}
}
return result;
}
}
From Database: Get All Actions IDs (like divAction1,divAction2 ....) dynamic in DATASET (DTActions) allow on specific User.
In Aspx: in HTML Put Action(button,anchor etc) in div or span and give them id like
<div id="divAction1" visible="false" runat="server" clientidmode="Static">
<a id="anchorAction" runat="server">Submit
</a>
</div>
IN CS: Use this function on your page:
private void ShowHideActions()
{
var controls = Page.GetAllControlsOfType<HtmlGenericControl>();
foreach (DataRow dr in DTActions.Rows)
{
foreach (Control cont in controls)
{
if (cont.ClientID == "divAction" + dr["ActionID"].ToString())
{
cont.Visible = true;
}
}
}
}
Recursively find all controls matching the specified predicate (do not include root Control):
public static IEnumerable<Control> FindControlsRecursive(this Control control, Func<Control, bool> predicate)
{
var results = new List<Control>();
foreach (Control child in control.Controls)
{
if (predicate(child))
{
results.Add(child);
}
results.AddRange(child.FindControlsRecursive(predicate));
}
return results;
}
Usage:
myControl.FindControlsRecursive(c => c.ID == "findThisID");
I decided to just build controls dictionaries. Harder to maintain, might run faster than the recursive FindControl().
protected void Page_Load(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
this.BuildControlDics();
}
private void BuildControlDics()
{
_Divs = new Dictionary<MyEnum, HtmlContainerControl>();
_Divs.Add(MyEnum.One, this.divOne);
_Divs.Add(MyEnum.Two, this.divTwo);
_Divs.Add(MyEnum.Three, this.divThree);
}
And before I get down-thumbs for not answering the OP's question...
Q: Now, my question is that is there any other way/solution to find the nested control in ASP.NET? A: Yes, avoid the need to search for them in the first place. Why search for things you already know are there? Better to build a system allowing reference of known objects.
https://blog.codinghorror.com/recursive-pagefindcontrol/
Page.FindControl("DataList1:_ctl0:TextBox3");
OR
private Control FindControlRecursive(Control root, string id)
{
if (root.ID == id)
{
return root;
}
foreach (Control c in root.Controls)
{
Control t = FindControlRecursive(c, id);
if (t != null)
{
return t;
}
}
return null;
}
The following example defines a Button1_Click event handler. When invoked, this handler uses the FindControl method to locate a control with an ID property of TextBox2 on the containing page. If the control is found, its parent is determined using the Parent property and the parent control's ID is written to the page. If TextBox2 is not found, "Control Not Found" is written to the page.
private void Button1_Click(object sender, EventArgs MyEventArgs)
{
// Find control on page.
Control myControl1 = FindControl("TextBox2");
if(myControl1!=null)
{
// Get control's parent.
Control myControl2 = myControl1.Parent;
Response.Write("Parent of the text box is : " + myControl2.ID);
}
else
{
Response.Write("Control not found");
}
}
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