Hi everyone.
Today I am going to talk about the __doPostBack
function, because there is some confusion with using this function.
You can see this __doPostBack
function in your ASP.NET generated HTML code.
The function takes the following two arguments:
eventTarget - This contains the ID of the control that caused the post back.
eventArgument - This contains any additional data associated with the control.
In any ASP.NET page the two hidden fields: __EVENTTARGET
and __EVENTARGUMENT
are automatically declared.
When a page is posted back to the server ASP.NET inspects __EVENTTARGET
and __EVENTARGUMENT
values and this way it can decide which of the controls caused the page to be posted back and what is the event that has to be handled.
The value of the parameters eventTarget
and eventArgument
are stored in the hidden fields. The two hidden variables can be accessed from the code behind using the forms or params collection.
If we inspect the code of the __doPostBack
function, we can see that it first sets the values of two hidden fields with the two parameters passed to the function. After this, the page is submitted back to the server. The ID of the control which causes the postback is stored in the __EVENTTARGET hidden field, so you can find the control which caused the postback.
<a id="LinkButton1" href="javascript:__doPostBack( 'LButton3','' )">LinkButton</a>
You can see the function call __doPostBack('LButton3','')
in the href and the argument passed for eventTarget
is "LButton3" which is the id of the link button control (EventSource)
Example
- Add two hidden fields inside the form.
<input type =hidden name ="__EVENTTARGET" value ="">
<input type =hidden name ="__EVENTARGUMENT" value ="">
- Add javascript under the Head tag.
<script>
function __doPostBack( eventTarget, eventArgument )
{
document.Form1.__EVENTTARGET.value = eventTarget;
document.Form1.__EVENTARGUMENT.value = eventArgument;
document.Form1.submit();
}
</script>
- Add two controls.
<a id="LButton3" href="javascript:__doPostBack('Button2','')">LinkButton</a>
<asp:Button ID="Button2" runat="server" onclick="Button2_Click" Text="Button" />
- Add function in your cs page.
protected void Button2_Click(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
Response.Write("Welcome to Student Academic Blog");
}
- You also need some code in the code behind to capture the postback and fire the event. In the PageLoad method add.
if (Request.Form["__EVENTTARGET"] == "Button2")
{
Button2_Click( this, new EventArgs( ) );
}
This will capture the posted variable __EVENTTARGET
and cause it to fire the event "Button2_Click". You can also pass an event argument along with the target in case you need to pass something to your code behind:
__doPostBack( "Button2', '<event argument here>' )
This would be captured in the code behind as Request.Form["__EVENTARGUEMENT"]
So this is how you can use __doPostBack
Enjoy it