Reputation: 2085
I'm working on a .net 3.5 site, standard website project.
I've written a custom page class in the sites App_Code folder (MyPage).
I also have a master page with a property.
public partial class MyMaster : System.Web.UI.MasterPage
{
...
private string pageID = "";
public string PageID
{
get { return pageID; }
set { pageID = value; }
}
}
I'm trying to reference this property from a property in MyPage.
public class MyPage : System.Web.UI.Page
{
...
public string PageID
{
set
{
((MyMaster)Master).PageID = value;
}
get
{
return ((MyMaster)Master).PageID;
}
}
}
I end up with "The type or namespace name 'MyMaster' could not be found. I've got it working by using FindControl() instead of a property on the MyMaster page, but IDs in the master page could change.
Upvotes: 4
Views: 6129
Reputation: 1273
I realise there are already accepted solutions for this, but I just stumbled across this thread.
The simplest solution is the one listed in the Microsoft website (http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/c8y19k6h.ASPX )
Basically it says, your code will work as-is, if you include an extra directive in the child page aspx:
<%@ MasterType VirtualPath="~/MyMaster.Master" %>
Then you can directly reference the property in the base MyPage by:
public string PageID
{
set
{
Master.PageID = value;
}
get
{
return Master.PageID;
}
}
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 2085
I found some background to this, it happens because of the way things are built and referenced.
Everything in App_Code compiles into an assembly.
The rest, aspx files, code behind, masterpages etc, compile into another assemlby that references the App_Code one.
Hence the one way street.
And also why Ben's solution works. Thanks Ben.
Tis all clear to me now.
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 26956
I've tended to do the following with Web Site projects:
In App_Code create the the following:
BaseMaster.cs
using System.Web.UI;
public class BaseMaster : MasterPage
{
public string MyString { get; set; }
}
BasePage.cs:
using System;
using System.Web.UI;
public class BasePage : Page
{
protected void Page_Load(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
if (null != Master && Master is BaseMaster)
{
((BaseMaster)Master).MyString = "Some value";
}
}
}
My Master pages then inherit from BaseMaster:
using System;
public partial class Masters_MyMasterPage : BaseMaster
{
protected void Page_Load(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
if (!string.IsNullOrEmpty(MyString))
{
// Do something.
}
}
}
And my pages inherit from BasePage:
public partial class _Default : BasePage
Upvotes: 6