For the current site I'm working on, I did it by creating a user control that inherits System.Web.UI.Page. Then, when I add a new web form I have it inherit the user control (named "PageTemplate") instead of System.Web.UI.Page.
Not only does PageTemplate have all my functions, but it also has code to check for my logon cookie, redirect to / if the user is in an admin area of the site, but is not an administrator, and it loads the HTML for the page UI. It's worked out great, I like it much more then includes in ASP. ~Brad -----Original Message----- From: Gerald de Bueger [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Tuesday, December 03, 2002 10:27 AM To: dotnet Subject: Create my own library of functions Hi all, I'm new to .net and want to learn how to do stuff I did in asp in ASP.Net In classic asp, I include huge file at the top of each page. Those files contain usefull functions. For instance, I've got a function called isNullOrEmpty. So in the page I can just say: if isNullOrEmpty(sValue) then .... What would be the best way to do that in .net. I'd like to access the function directly without having to declare it first. Like if it was a c# intinsec function as toString() for instance. In other words, is there a way to get the same functionnality as an include but in a more powerfull maner? Thanks for your help. I hope I was clear enough. Gerald --- You are currently subscribed to dotnet as: [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe send a blank email to %%email.unsub%% --------- Administrated by 15 Seconds : http://www.15Seconds.com List Archives/Search : http://local.15Seconds.com/search Subscription Information : http://www.15seconds.com/listserv.htm Advertising Information: http://www.internet.com/mediakit/ --- You are currently subscribed to dotnet as: [email protected] To unsubscribe send a blank email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] --------- Administrated by 15 Seconds : http://www.15Seconds.com List Archives/Search : http://local.15Seconds.com/search Subscription Information : http://www.15seconds.com/listserv.htm Advertising Information: http://www.internet.com/mediakit/
