I am creating a site wherein I have a folder which contains some .cs files. I want to access those classes in .aspx and .ascx files. I’ve created some properties in it, but when I create the object of the class I don’t find that property via IntelliSense.
How can I use and consume those properties from that .cs file?
The website will only compile code files that are in the App_Code folder or are codebehind files for referenced controls. There isn't a way to reference classes defined in code files outside of the App_Code folder.
If you compile those classes and put the resulting dll in your website's bin folder, then you can reference them. To do that, you'll need to add them to a Web Application project in Visual Studio. See Ian Robinson's WAP blog post for most details.
Just have those properties public and you'll see them.
If still no luck please post your code and also tell: can you create instance of the class without error? Can you access any other properties or methods?
Related
I am working on a ASP.NET VB project. The host is pretty restrictive, so the App_Code folder has to be placed under the wwwroot folder.
My current folder structure (on the server) looks like this:
root
<-- Cant create folders or files here, host is restrictive.
wwwroot
App_Code
Class.VB
Styles
style.css
default.aspx
web.config
It seems to be working, if Class.vb contains errors, i get a compilation error on the website, so i know its compiling the class.
But i am unable to use the class in my other code files.
Example:
Dim emailFilter As Validation = New Validation()
I get this error in VS2010:
Type 'Validation' is not defined
How do i use the App_Code folder when its inside another folder?
Could it be an issue with namespaces? I might be more inclined to create a library for your validation class and add a reference to it instead.
I did find some similar issues to yours and they all referenced setting the Build Action for the class to 'compile'.
Classes residing in App_Code is not accessible
I have created an asp.net website, with the accompanying app_code folder.
In the same solution I added a web application project, and I want to use the classes that are in the website app_code folder.
I tried adding a reference, and then adding the project (the website), but the list of project is empty...
Thanks.
You are doing it wrong. Create a class library project and move all those classes from the app_code folder to the new project. Then reference this project from both website and web application project.
Very late, but sometimes classes in App_Code may need to stay in the same project, then
Create a new folder (say "code" )in web application, and add class files from app_code as links to this folder. This lets you have a single copy.
2) Ensure Build Action for each of these imported files are "Compile" in the file property folder if need be.
3) Exclude App_Code folder from web application.
More information and reasons - please see here:
http://vishaljoshi.blogspot.in/2009/07/appcode-folder-doesnt-work-with-web.html
I've seen lots of posts about the Inherits Attribute, and the Parser Error "Could not load type"
I can get this working by putting "RootNamespace.PageName" for a specific page, where RootNamespace matches the Root namespace in my project properites.
But I would rather not put the namespace in there. i.e. I would rather put "PageName" than "Namespace.PageName".
I have a library project with a few DLLs and 10 or so .aspx and .ascx files.
To get an update of my library project, other projects in my company copy the DLLs in and then copy the .aspx and .ascx files into a specific folder in their project.
Only problem is every time they copy they have to change the Namespace of the inherits attribute to match the root namesapce in their project.
If they don't do this, they get no compiler errors but just get a Parser error when they hit the libary .aspx and .ascx files.
This is very annoying, it seems very ridiculous that so many pages will not work if the project root namespace changes.
Does anybody have any ideas on how I can make library pages and user controls for nuse withing other peoples projects?
Thanks,
Mike G
Ah ha! A colleague stumbled upon a way around this by accident...
OK I have a single shared "Library" project and many "normal" projects that make use of shared stuff from the Library...
1- Create a "Library" WebApplication that outputs a DLL, and put your web library code and also .ascxs and .aspx pages into the WebApplication project. 2- Reference the "Library" DLL in your "Normal" projects 3- Copy just the shared .aspx and .ascx files from "library" into the "normal" projects, but ... (important bit!) ... without the code behind
In our example we don't actually include the copied .ascx and .aspx files in the project (e.g. They're not referenced in the .vbproj file) and they don't get put in source control, they just get copied in from the library every time you build. We haven't experimented with what happens if you tell the project about the .aspx and .ascx files but they definitely load OK at run time.
So it does actually make sense no I think ab out it.
Basically the root namespace of the .aspx files is unachanged it's just refers to classes in the referenced library DLL so it all works.
I have a website that has 2 files as follows:
page.aspx
page.aspx.cs
It used to be that I could just drop new files onto the web server and IIS would automatically compile the files and I could access the page e.g.
http://www.website.com/page.aspx
... and the associated functionality in the page class contained in the .cs file would work nicely.
Now I get the error: "Could not load type namespace.classname" which refers to my page class.
Now for some strange reason I have to put all my .cs files, even page classes into the app_code folder.
All that has changed on my website is that I reorganised the structure so that instead of my pages being on the web root they are now inside http://.../newfolder/page.aspx.
For some reason all my page.aspx.cs files now have to be in app_code.
Any ideas?
Sounds like you are mixing up a Web Application Project and a Web Site.
Are you sure the files are exactly the same? Perhaps one #Page directive says CodeBehind=Page.aspx.cs and the other says CodeFile=Page.aspx.cs?
CodeBehind requires project compilation, so you cannot just drop in a new .cs file, you need to upload a new compiled DLL. CodeFile will allow dynamic compilation.
The App_Code directory is dynamically compiled (in both cases) when your app is accessed, so the Inherit directive has a valid type when you put the file there. In general, don't do this. You want the .cs file to go with the .aspx file. Use App_Code for business logic or utility classes that aren't associated with a particular page.
Finally, is this new subdirectory set up as a new app in IIS? What does the web.config file in your new directory change? Are you running the same version of ASP.NET? Check the "compilation" tag. I'm not sure what you could do there to cause this, but I'm sure you could cause some chaos.
In a Project I have different modules or folders.In a module I have a namespace called idsobject.I have class in this namespace.
In another CS fle in the same folder I'm trying to access this class.But i'm not able.while if put that cs file in aPP_code than i able to get that class.
how to access the class in another cs file within the same folder.
thanks in advance
In an ASP.NET web site project, *.cs files are only compiled and made available to the rest of the application if they're located in the App_Code folder, or a subfolder in App_Code, or if they are associated with a *.aspx as code behind. The architecture is intended to allow full server-side compilation. You can't just put a *.cs anywhere and expect IIS to be able to find it, compile it, and link it with the rest of the app.
With an ASP.NET web application, you can put *.cs files where ever you want, because they are compiled by Visual Studio using details that are kept in the project file.
I'm guessing that you're using a web site project, which is why it works when you put the file in App_Code.
First check the namespace. If you accessing the correct namespace then perhaps the class access is set to private.
You could give us some extra information.
This sounds strange. Putting a class in a file in a Web project with a .cs extension should work just fine no matter which folder the file is located.
The only thing I can suggest is to make sure that there is at least a
using idsobject;
line at the top of the code unit where you are trying to access the class. The default behaviour for ASP.NET Web forms is for no namespace to be defined, which can sometimes lead to confusion.
The class should be marked as public if you've tried to access it from another namespace.
If it doesn't help, please post here a problematic code snippet.