Friday, April 3, 2020

Web Application Project Option in Visual Studio 2005 Tutorial 2

Hi All,

This is continue Web Application Project Option in Visual Studio 2005 Tutorial 1 


Tutorial 2: Code-Behind with VS 2005 Web Application Projects

The below tutorial helps explain the code-behind model and project structure of pages built within VS 2005 Web Application Projects. Please make sure that you have already completed Tutorial 1: Building Your First Web Application Project before reviewing this one.

Some Background on the VS 2003 Code-behind Model for ASP.NET Applications


ASP.NET Pages in a VS 2003 web project have two files associated with them -- one is a .aspx file that contains the html and declarative server control markup, and the other is a .cs "code-behind" file that contains the UI logic for the page:


Control markup declarations are defined within the .aspx file itself.  For example:
<asp:Label  id="Label1" runat="server"></asp:Label>
And corresponding protected field declarations are added in the .cs code-behind class that match the name and type of controls defined within the .aspx file. For example:
protected System.Web.UI.WebControls.Label Label1:
ASP.NET does the work of wiring up a reference from this code-behind field declaration to point to the declared control in the .aspx file at runtime. Developers can then program directly against this control within their code-behind file. 

VS 2003 automatically adds/updates these protected control field declarations at the top of the code-behind file (these are updated everytime a developer switches into WYSIWYG design-view):
namespace Webapplication1
{
public class webform1:System.Web.UI.Page
{
protected System.Web.UI.WebControls.Button Button1:
protected System.Web.UI.WebControls.Label Label1:
}
private void page_Load (object sender ,System.EventArgs e)
{
}
VS 2003 also then maintains a hidden region block inside the code-behind of tool-generated code to register event-handlers and keep them in sync with the design-surface:
#region Web Form Designer generate code
overrride protected void OnInit (EventArgs e)
{
InitializeComponent();
base.OnInit(e);
}
private void InitializeComponent()
{
this.Button.Click +=new system.EventHandler(this.Button1_Click);
this.Load += new system.EventHandler(this.Load);
}
#endrigion
There are two common complaints/problems with this:
1) VS 2003 is adding/deleting code in the same file where the developer is authoring their own code -- and accidental conflicts/mistakes do end up happening (for example: some code that the developer writes can sometimes get modified or deleted by VS).  The tool-generated hidden block above is also a little "messy" for some people's tastes. 
2) The control-declarations are only updated when a develo#eper using VS 2003 activates the WYSIWYG page designer.  If a developer is only using the source-editor to customize the page, they will not get control updates, and will instead have to add these control declarations manually (which is a pain).

VS 2005 Code-behind Model for ASP.NET Applications

VS 2005 uses a code-behind model conceptually the same as VS 2003. Specifically, each .aspx page continues to inherit from a code-behind class that contains protected control field references for each control in the .aspx page:
What is different between VS 2003 and VS 2005 is that Visual Studio no longer injects its tool-specific wire-up code in the developer's code-behind file.  Instead, it takes advantage of a new language feature in C# and VB called "partial types" (or partial classes) to split the code-behind implementation across two files.  One of these partial class files is the developer-owned code-behind file that contains developer-written event-handlers and code for the page.  The other partial class file is then a tool-generated/maintained file that contains the protected control field declarations and the other design-time code that Visual Studio requires.  The benefit of splitting them out into two separate files at design-time is that it ensures that the code that VS creates and maintains never interferes (or deletes) code that a developer writes.  At compile-time, these files are compiled together and generate a single code-behind class. 
With the VS 2005 Web Application project model, the design-time partial class is generated and persisted on disk by VS 2005.  This new design-time partial-class file has the filename naming pattern: PageName.aspx.designer.cs.  If you expand any new page created within your VS 2005 Web Application project, you can see this file listed under the associated Page.aspx file along with the developer-owned code-behind file:
If you open up the code-behind file of the page (Default.aspx.cs), you'll then see the code-behind logic of the page -- which contains all of the code and event handlers that a developer writes (and no tool-generated "code-spit" content -- which means it stays very clean):
If you open the Default.aspx.designer.cs file, you'll then see the design-time code of the page -- which contains the field declarations for controls within the .aspx page:
Because the MyWebProject._Default class is marked as "partial" in both of the above two files, the compiler will merge them into a single generated class at compile-time. This means that any variable, method or field generated in the default.aspx.designer.cs file can be used from the default.aspx.cs code-behind file (just as if it was declared in the code-behind file itself). For example, within the Page_Load event handler we could easily add the below code that uses the "Label1" and "Calendar1" control:
This will compile clean and run just fine -- because the "Label1" and "Calendar1" field references have been defined within the default.aspx.designer.cs file.
When you do a build inside a VS 2005 Web Application project, all pages, user-controls, master pages (and their associated code-behind files+design-time generated files), along with all other standalone classes within the project are compiled into a single assembly. This is the same behavior as with VS 2003.
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