OK, another road bump in my current project.
I have never had form elements in both my master and content pages, I tend to have all the forms in the content where relevant.
In the current project however, we have a page where they want both. A login form at the top right, and a questions form in the content.
Having tried to get this in, I have run in to the issue of ASP.NET moaning about the need for a single form element in a master page. TBH, I really dont get why this is a requirement on ASP.NET's part, but hey ho.
Does anyone know if/how I can get the master and content pages to contain form elements that work independantly?
If not, can you offer advice on how to proceed to get the desired look/functionality?
Master pages typicially contain page headers, footers, margin and column guides, and other elements that occur on multiple pages in your document. Every new document automatically contains one master page called “A-Master,” and this master page is automatically applied to every page in the document.
What is a Master Page? A Master Page is a nonprinting page that you can use as the template for the rest of the pages in your document. Master pages can contain text and graphic elements that will appear on all pages of a publication (i.e. headers, footers, page numbers, etc.)
Thought I would review some of my outstanding questions and see if I can close some of them off.
This one was an interesting one. I outright refused to believe you can only have one form on an ASP.NET page. This to me made no sense. I have seen plenty of webpages that have more than one form on a web page, why should an ASP.NET page be any different?
So, it got me thinking.
ASP.NET pages try to emulate the WinForms environment, by provided state persistance through the PostBack model. This provides an element of state to a stateless environment. In order to do this, the runtime needs to be able to have the ability to maintain this state within each "form". It does this by posting back data to itself. It's important to note that:
This to me was the million pound question (I am British). I understand that ASP.NET needs this, especially if you are using ASP.NET server controls, but why the hell can't I make my own additional forms?
So, I thought screw it, just make your own form!
And I did. I added a bog-standard, simple form with a submit action of "#". This then performs a POST to the current page, with the Form data for the given form in the request.
Guess what? It all worked fine. So I ended up with:
<form runat="server" id="aspNetForm"...> </form>
tags. This meant that all content pages automatically had a form to work with.This provided me with a relatively simple, clean solution to my problem. My login form works fine in tandem with all the content forms created, some of which are complex forms, others use lots of server controls and many PostBacks, and so on.
I hope this helps others.
the form tag itself is in the MasterPage, as such, you can code any asp.net server controls onto the master page that you wish. And you can write up the processing logic for those server controls on the master page's code behind file.
So, in your example, you can have the login controls on the upper right of the master page, and then have the authentication logic in the code page for the MASTER PAGE, not your content page.
This allows you to have the login controls on every page, and maintain that processing, as well as maintain the content controls and their processing on their individual pages.
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