Web Forms User Controls
In addition to HTML and Web server controls, you can easily create your own custom, reusable controls by using the same techniques you have learned to develop Web Forms pages. These controls are called user controls.
User controls offer you an easy way to partition and reuse common user interface (UI) functionality across your ASP.NET Web applications. Like a Web Forms page, you can author these controls with any text editor, or develop them using code-behind classes. Also, like a Web Forms page, user controls are compiled when first requested and stored in server memory to reduce the response time for subsequent requests. Unlike pages, however, user controls cannot be requested independently; they must be included in a Web Forms page to work. For more information about the relationship between Web Forms pages and user controls, see Converting a Web Forms Page into a User Control.
User controls offer you greater flexibility than server-side includes (SSIs) by accessing the object model support provided by ASP.NET. Rather than simply including the functionality provided by another file, you can program against any properties you declare in the control, just like any other ASP.NET server control.
While you need to choose a single language when authoring a user control, you can include multiple user controls in a single Web Forms page that have been authored in different languages. For example, you can create a user control with Visual Basic that imports data from an XML file and another user control, created with C#, that contains an order form, and include both controls in the same Web Forms page.
Note When you create a Web application using Visual Studio .NET, all pages and user controls in the application must be in the same programming language.
In addition, you can cache output from a user control independently from the rest of its containing Web Forms page. Called fragment caching, this technique can improve performance for your site if used appropriately. For example, if your user control contains an ASP.NET server control that makes a database request, but the rest of the page contains only literal text and simple code that runs on the server, you can fragment cache the user control to increase your application's performance. For more information, see Caching Portions of an ASP.NET Page.
In This Section
- Creating a User Control
Describes how to use a text or HTML editor to create a user control. - Converting a Web Forms Page to a User Control
Describes how to change a Web Forms page into a Web Forms user control. - Including a User Control in a Web Forms Page
Describes how to include a user control in a Web Forms page. - Manipulating User Control Properties
Describes how to access user control properties from the page that contains the user control. - Handling User Control Events
Describes how to handle user control events within the user control code-declaration block or code-behind file. - Creating Instances of User Controls Programmatically
Describes how to create a user control from code. - Developing User Controls in a Code-Behind File
Describes how to create user controls using two separate files: an .ascx file that contains UI syntax and the code-behind file that contains the logic the user control performs. - Creating a Templated User Control
Describes how to develop user controls that implement templates.
Related Sections
- ASP.NET Server Controls
Introduces the four types of server controls and describes how to create and program them in Web Forms pages. - Web Forms Pages
Describes how to create forms-based Web pages that are processed on the server. - Caching Portions of an ASP.NET Page
Discusses the techniques you can use to cache regions of your pages using the @ OutputCache directive and user controls. This technique is useful if you do not want to cache entire pages. - UserControl Class
Describes the events, methods, and properties of the .NET Framework class associated with user controls.