thank you.  I will try


On Wed, Sep 28, 2011 at 12:48 AM, Gunawan Hadikusumo <
[email protected]> wrote:

> The best way to learn C# is by downloading the example and start from
> there. You can go to codeproject.com, download the project, find the
> simple one.
> Run it, Break it, Fix it ! Than you would understand !
>
>
> On Wed, Sep 28, 2011 at 12:27 AM, Dean Karres <[email protected]>wrote:
>
>> ViewState!  Ok, I will try that.
>>
>> Thank you,
>> Dean...K...
>>
>>
>>
>> On Tue, Sep 27, 2011 at 2:51 AM, Cerebrus <[email protected]> wrote:
>> > This is not C#.net per se. When you talk webforms, it is ASP.NET
>> > you're dealing with. C# would then be just a language that helps you
>> > to program ASP.NET web forms.
>> >
>> > Getting past that confusion over terminology and to your question - It
>> > is indeed a problem of state. You mention that you've worked with web
>> > applications before so you probably are well aware that the web is
>> > stateless. In other words, one request has nothing to do with the
>> > previous one(s). Fortunately for many developers, Microsoft mitigated
>> > this problem to a great extent by introducing the concept of ViewState
>> > with .NET.
>> >
>> > In this case, the textbox would initially be blank when the page first
>> > loads. When you click the button1, the form posts back to the server,
>> > where the click eventhandler of the button1 sets the value of the
>> > textbox to "7". The form is then rendered at the client browser. On
>> > subsequently clicking the button1, the process repeats.
>> >
>> > Now two things to check:
>> >
>> > 1. Is Viewstate turned on for your page and for the textbox? If not,
>> > then the textbox will not "remember" the previous value and will
>> > always have the latest appended character only.
>> >
>> > 2. If Viewstate is on, does your code in button1 account for the fact
>> > that the textbox may already have text? In other words, does it append
>> > the new value to the existing one? For example:
>> >
>> > TextBox1.Text = TextBox1.Text + "7";
>> >
>> >
>> > HTH
>> >
>> > On Sep 26, 9:33 pm, dk <[email protected]> wrote:
>> >> Hi,
>> >>
>> >> I am working my way through a on-line C# course.  I have missed
>> >> something fundamental though.  I hope that you can clue me in.
>> >>
>> >> The on-line course is using C# .Net 1.0.  As part of the class I am to
>> >> create a "regular" app and a web based version of the same app.  I
>> >> created the regular app in a couple of hours and it works well.  I
>> >> have been banging my head against my monitor for a couple of days over
>> >> the web based version though.  I have created web apps for years using
>> >> other tools on other OSes, this is my first step into the land of
>> >> microsoft.
>> >>
>> >> Here is my basic situation.  I have a textbox called "display".  I
>> >> have a button called "button1".  When I click "button1" I want the
>> >> number "7" to appear in the textbox.  I have done this part.  I have
>> >> the textbox and the "onclick" code to put the value into display.
>> >> What I am missing is the next part...
>> >>
>> >> Ok, if I click "button1" one time the number "7" appears in
>> >> "display".  If I click button1 a second time I want the second
>> >> instance of "7" to be appended to the existing value in the textbox,
>> >> i.e. "77".  If I click a third time then "777", etc.
>> >>
>> >> Ok, this is where my understanding falls apart.  Every time I click
>> >> button1 there is only one "7" in the textbox.  It seems as though the
>> >> "form" looses state after each click.  I spent the weekend trying to
>> >> use client side javascript but that was a lot harder that I ever
>> >> thought it would be AND also seemed to loose state.
>> >>
>> >> How should this be approached?  While I have experience with web page
>> >> coding I don't seem to know enough about c#/.Net to come close on this
>> >
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>>
>>
>>
>> --
>> Dean Karres
>>
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>
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