I am trying to improve performance of my web portal. I’m using Session to store state information.
But I heard that using session will decrease the speed of the application. Is there any other way to pass values across the page in asp.net.
Answers:
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Method 1
You can pass values from one page to another by followings..
Response.Redirect Cookies Application Variables HttpContext
Response.Redirect
SET :
Response.Redirect("Defaultaspx?Name=Pandian");
GET :
string Name = Request.QueryString["Name"];
Cookies
SET :
HttpCookie cookName = new HttpCookie("Name");
cookName.Value = "Pandian";
GET :
string name = Request.Cookies["Name"].Value;
Application Variables
SET :
Application["Name"] = "pandian";
GET :
string Name = Application["Name"].ToString();
Refer the full content here : Pass values from one to another
Method 2
There are multiple ways to achieve this. I can explain you in brief about the 4 types which we use in our daily programming life cycle.
Please go through the below points.
1 Query String.
FirstForm.aspx.cs
Response.Redirect("SecondForm.aspx?Parameter=" + TextBox1.Text);
SecondForm.aspx.cs
TextBox1.Text = Request.QueryString["Parameter"].ToString();
This is the most reliable way when you are passing integer kind of value or other short parameters. More advance in this method if you are using any special characters in the value while passing it through query string, you must encode the value before passing it to next page. So our code snippet of will be something like this:
FirstForm.aspx.cs
Response.Redirect("SecondForm.aspx?Parameter=" + Server.UrlEncode(TextBox1.Text));
SecondForm.aspx.cs
TextBox1.Text = Server.UrlDecode(Request.QueryString["Parameter"].ToString());
URL Encoding
2. Passing value through context object
Passing value through context object is another widely used method.
FirstForm.aspx.cs
TextBox1.Text = this.Context.Items["Parameter"].ToString();
SecondForm.aspx.cs
this.Context.Items["Parameter"] = TextBox1.Text;
Server.Transfer("SecondForm.aspx", true);
Note that we are navigating to another page using Server.Transfer instead of Response.Redirect.Some of us also use Session object to pass values. In that method, value is store in Session object and then later pulled out from Session object in Second page.
3. Posting form to another page instead of PostBack
Third method of passing value by posting page to another form. Here is the example of that:
FirstForm.aspx.cs
private void Page_Load(object sender, System.EventArgs e)
{
buttonSubmit.Attributes.Add("onclick", "return PostPage();");
}
And we create a javascript function to post the form.
SecondForm.aspx.cs
function PostPage()
{
document.Form1.action = "SecondForm.aspx";
document.Form1.method = "POST";
document.Form1.submit();
}
TextBox1.Text = Request.Form["TextBox1"].ToString();
Here we are posting the form to another page instead of itself. You might get viewstate invalid or error in second page using this method. To handle this error is to put EnableViewStateMac=false
4. Another method is by adding PostBackURL property of control for cross page post back
In ASP.NET 2.0, Microsoft has solved this problem by adding PostBackURL property of control for cross page post back. Implementation is a matter of setting one property of control and you are done.
FirstForm.aspx.cs
<asp:Button id=buttonPassValue style=”Z-INDEX: 102″ runat=”server” Text=”Button” PostBackUrl=”~/SecondForm.aspx”></asp:Button>
SecondForm.aspx.cs
TextBox1.Text = Request.Form["TextBox1"].ToString();
In above example, we are assigning PostBackUrl property of the button we can determine the page to which it will post instead of itself. In next page, we can access all controls of the previous page using Request object.
You can also use PreviousPage class to access controls of previous page instead of using classic Request object.
SecondForm.aspx
TextBox textBoxTemp = (TextBox) PreviousPage.FindControl(“TextBox1″); TextBox1.Text = textBoxTemp.Text;
As you have noticed, this is also a simple and clean implementation of passing value between pages.
Reference: MICROSOFT MSDN WEBSITE
HAPPY CODING!
Method 3
If it’s just for passing values between pages and you only require it for the one request. Use Context.
Context
The Context object holds data for a single user, for a single
request, and it is only persisted for the duration of the request. The
Context container can hold large amounts of data, but typically it is
used to hold small pieces of data because it is often implemented for
every request through a handler in the global.asax. The Context
container (accessible from the Page object or using
System.Web.HttpContext.Current) is provided to hold values that need
to be passed between different HttpModules and HttpHandlers. It can
also be used to hold information that is relevant for an entire
request. For example, the IBuySpy portal stuffs some configuration
information into this container during the Application_BeginRequest
event handler in the global.asax. Note that this only applies during
the current request; if you need something that will still be around
for the next request, consider using ViewState. Setting and getting
data from the Context collection uses syntax identical to what you
have already seen with other collection objects, like the Application,
Session, and Cache. Two simple examples are shown here:
// Add item to Context Context.Items["myKey"] = myValue; // Read an item from the Context Response.Write(Context["myKey"]);
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/magazine/cc300437.aspx#S6
Using the above. If you then do a Server.Transfer the data you’ve saved in the context will now be available to the next page. You don’t have to concern yourself with removing/tidying up this data as it is only scoped to the current request.
Method 4
You can assign it to a hidden field, and retrieve it using
var value= Request.Form["value"]
Method 5
You can use query string to pass value from one page to another..
1.pass the value using querystring
Response.Redirect("Default3.aspx?value=" + txt.Text + "& number="+n);
2.Retrive the value in the page u want by using any of these methods..
Method1:
string v = Request.QueryString["value"];
string n=Request.QueryString["number"];
Method2:
NameValueCollection v = Request.QueryString;
if (v.HasKeys())
{
string k = v.GetKey(0);
string n = v.Get(0);
if (k == "value")
{
lbltext.Text = n.ToString();
}
if (k == "value1")
{
lbltext.Text = "error occured";
}
}
NOTE:Method 2 is the fastest method.
All methods was sourced from stackoverflow.com or stackexchange.com, is licensed under cc by-sa 2.5, cc by-sa 3.0 and cc by-sa 4.0