I'm working with a static class in C#, and am trying to use Control.RenderControl()
to get a string / mark-up representation of a Control
.
Unfortunately the control (and all child controls) use event bubbling to populate certain values, for example, when instantiating, then calling RenderControl()
on the following:
public class MyTest : Control
{
protected override void OnLoad(EventArgs e)
{
this.Controls.Add(new LiteralControl("TEST"));
base.OnLoad(e);
}
}
I am returned an empty string, because OnLoad()
is never fired.
Is there a way I can invoke a 'fake' page lifecycle? Perhaps use some dummy Page
control?
I was able to accomplish this by using a local instance of Page
and HttpServerUtility.Execute
:
// Declare a local instance of a Page and add your control to it
var page = new Page();
var control = new MyTest();
page.Controls.Add(control);
var sw = new StringWriter();
// Execute the page, which will run the lifecycle
HttpContext.Current.Server.Execute(page, sw, false);
// Get the output of your control
var output = sw.ToString();
EDIT
If you need the control to exist inside a <form />
tag, then simply add an HtmlForm
to the page, and add your control to that form like so:
// Declare a local instance of a Page and add your control to it
var page = new Page();
var control = new MyTest();
// Add your control to an HTML form
var form = new HtmlForm();
form.Controls.Add(control);
// Add the form to the page
page.Controls.Add(form);
var sw = new StringWriter();
// Execute the page, which will in turn run the lifecycle
HttpContext.Current.Server.Execute(page, sw, false);
// Get the output of the control and the form that wraps it
var output = sw.ToString();
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