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Articles / web / ASP.NET

Persisting the scroll position of child DIV’s using MS AJAX

4.72/5 (13 votes)
9 Sep 2007CPOL2 min read 1   360  
An article on building a control using MS AJAX to persist the scroll position of child DIV's.

Introduction

While the ScriptManager and UpdatePanel found in Microsoft AJAX do a good job of persisting your pages' scroll position during partial post back operations, you might be surprised to find out the same is not the case for scrollable child DIVs contained within an UpdatePanel.

The PersistentScrollPosition control presented in this article seeks to remedy this issue, using a client-side behavior and ASP.NET server control implemented using Microsoft AJAX.

Background

While it is certainly not my intention to review the internals of the UpdatePanel and PageRequestManager or implementing any of the client-side components (Sys.Component, Sys.UI,Behavior, or Sys.UI.Control), a quick understanding can go a long way into understanding and resolving this particular problem. There are two key items to keep in mind for this control:

  1. Client-side components are disposed of and recreated during the partial post back lifecycle so you can't use the control's instance to store any data you need to survive this.
  2. The HTML output of the UpdatePanel is completely replaced during a partial post back (assuming it was triggered) through the innerHTML property, which is why the scroll position problem exists in the first place.

Using the code

For those who just want the solution, using the code is straightforward. The control has one property you need to set, named ControlToPersist. This is a string which takes the ID of the server-side container DIV (it must have runat="server").

HTML
<asp:UpdatePanel runat="server" ID="UpdatePanel" UpdateMode="always">
<ContentTemplate>
<asp:Button runat="server" ID="btnPostBack" Text="Post Back" OnClick="btnPostBack_Click" />
<br />
<div style="width:590px;height:400px;overflow-y:scroll;overflow-x:hidden;" 
     runat="server" id="persistMe">
<p>
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetuer adipiscing elit...</p>

</div>
<mbc:PersistentScrollPosition runat="server" ID="psf1" ControlToPersist="persistMe" /> 
</ContentTemplate> 
</asp:UpdatePanel>

Building the control

The control consists of two parts, both of which, for the most part, are very "cookie cutter". On the server side, we inherit from Control, and implement IScriptControl and INamingContainer, and create a HiddenField during initialization to store our scroll position in between partial post backs.

C#
public class PersistentScrollPosition : Control, IScriptControl, INamingContainer
{
    protected override void OnInit(EventArgs e)
    {
        base.OnInit(e);

        // Create hidden control for storage

        storage = new HiddenField();
        storage.ID = "storage";
        Controls.Add(storage);
    }
}

When creating the script descriptors for the client-side initiation, we pass through the scrollable DIV's ClientID, the control's ElementID, and we pass in a reference to the HiddenField's DOM element using the AddElementProprety method of the ScriptComponentDescriptor class.

C#
public IEnumerable<scriptdescriptor /> GetScriptDescriptors()
{
    ScriptComponentDescriptor scd = 
            new ScriptBehaviorDescriptor("Mbccs.WebControls.PersistentScrollPosition", 
            Control.ClientID);
    scd.AddElementProperty("storage", storage.ClientID);
    yield return scd;
}

On the client-side, the control inherits from the Sys.UI.Behavior base class. Upon control initialization, it hooks into two events: the scroll DOM event of the DIV, and the EndRequest event of the Sys.WebForms.PageRequestManager class. The EndRequest event is when the scroll state is restored, but I'll get to that shortly.

JavaScript
initialize : function() {
        Mbccs.WebControls.PersistentScrollPosition.callBaseMethod(this, 'initialize');
        
        this._scrollDelegate = Function.createDelegate(this, this._onScroll);
        this._endRequestDelegate = Function.createDelegate(this, this._onEndRequest);
        
        var prm = Sys.WebForms.PageRequestManager.getInstance();
        prm.add_endRequest(this._endRequestDelegate);
        
        $addHandler(this.get_element(), 'scroll', this._scrollDelegate);
}

When the DIV is scrolled, the x,y scroll position is serialized and stored in the HiddenField server-side control we created earlier.

JavaScript
_onScroll : function(e) {
        this._storage.value = 
             Sys.Serialization.JavaScriptSerializer.serialize(this._getScrollPosition());
    },

_getScrollPosition : function() {
        var el = this.get_element();
        
        if (el) {
            return {
                x: el.scrollLeft || 0,
                y: el.scrollTop || 0
            };
        }
    }

To prevent null's from floating around, the x,y coordinates are coerced into 0's if either the scrollLeft or scrollTop properties are null.

The EndRequest event is fired when "an asynchronous post-back is finished and the control has been returned to the browser", so it's a perfect time to restore our scroll state.

JavaScript
_onEndRequest : function(sender, args) {
        var o = null;        
        if(this._storage.value !== '')
            o = Sys.Serialization.JavaScriptSerializer.deserialize(this._storage.value);
            
        if (o) {
            var el = this.get_element();
            el.scrollLeft = o.x;
            el.scrollTop = o.y;
            this._storage.value = '';
        }
    }

The dispose method isn't usually a place of any particular interest, but its worthy of noting that it you need to unhook the DIV's scroll event prior to calling dispose on the base class.

JavaScript
dispose : function() {
        $removeHandler(this.get_element(), 'scroll', this._scrollDelegate);
        
        Mbccs.WebControls.PersistentScrollPosition.callBaseMethod(this, 'dispose');
        
        var prm = Sys.WebForms.PageRequestManager.getInstance();
        prm.remove_endRequest(this._endRequestDelegate);
        
        delete this._endRequestDelegate;
        delete this._scrollDelegate;
    }

License

This article, along with any associated source code and files, is licensed under The Code Project Open License (CPOL)