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Why can't i access page viewstate in usercontrol?

#1
I stored a object in viewstate on Page. Now when i access the same viewsate object on usercontrol,it shows as null. I even tried creating the same viewstate with same name in usercontrol and page.Both holds different value.

I understand that viewstate is a protected property. How does this thing implement in above scenerio or is there any other reason for this behaviour.

Edit:

Usercontrol is there in the page markup. I am not loading it dynamically.

I have a page EditFacilityworkType.aspx. On page I have a usercontrol FacilityWorkTypeDetails.aspx(FacilityWorkTypeDetails1). Inside this usercontrol i have a user control Workflow.aspx(Workflow1)

Page_Load() of Page
I am retrieving workflowdetails on page_load() of page.

FacilityWorktype facilityWorkType = facilityDetails.GetFacilityWorktypeDetail(SessionHelper.FacilityWorkTypeID);
ViewState["WorkFlow"] = facilityWorkType.FacilityWorkTypeWorkFlow

Inside usercontrol FacilityWorkTypeDetails.aspx. I have a property

public FacilityWorktype FacilityWorkTypeDetails
{
get
{
#region Fill FacilityWorktype
return GetEntityFromControl();
#endregion
}
set
{
PopulateControls(value);
}
}

Now i set this property in page load of page

FacilityWorkTypeDetails1.FacilityWorkTypeDetails = facilityWorkType;



Inside Workflow.aspx, I have a property


/// <summary>
/// Property to fill entity object from controls on this page
/// </summary>
public WorkFlow WorkFlowDetails
{
get
{
return GetEntityFromControls();
}
set
{
BindTranscriptionMethodDDL(ddlTranscMethod);
PopulateControls(value);
}
}

Now PopulateControls() of FacilityWorkTypeDetails1, i am setting property of workflow1

private void PopulateControls(FacilityWorktype value)
{

Workflow1.WorkFlowDetails = value.FacilityWorkTypeWorkFlow;
}

Now when i am retrieving values from

private WorkFlow GetEntityFromControls()
{
WorkFlow workFlow = (ViewState["WorkFlow"] as WorkFlow) ?? new WorkFlow();
//workFlow is null

}

So now inside this function workFlow is null. I want to ask,why is it null when i have set viewstate in page.
Reply

#2
On postback did you create the control? If the code behind hasn't created the ctrl then it won't know about it.

only applicable if this is a generated control. You may need to post code and more info to get a propper answer.

Viewstate is a monster which is why a lot of us are going to MVC.
Reply

#3
I still do not grok everything here (see my comments above). But I am pretty sure you are misunderstanding `ViewState`.

ViewState is *per control*, not per request or session or whatever.

In your example, consider some other control (e.g. a standard ASP.NET control) that for some reason decided to put something with a "name" of `WorkFlow` into viewstate. If what you are trying to do would work, this object would overwrite yours (or the other way around, yours would be overwritten by the other one).

Or am I missing something?

Maybe reading [TRULY Understanding ViewState](

[To see links please register here]

) could help you understand what viewstate is/how it works (yes, I really like this article, this is why I keep posting that link).
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#4
Scherand is very correct here. I'd like to add to what he has brought to the table.

Every control that derives from System.Web.UI.Control has the ViewState property. Under-the-hood the property is a StateBag collection. Every instance of a Control has its own StateBag for ViewState, so as Scherand mentioned, ViewState is unique to the control. When the page gets rendered, the entire Control tree of the Page is iterated, all ViewState collections are merged into a tree-like structure and that final structure is serialized to a string and rendered to the page.

Because the ViewState property is marked as protected, you can't get to the Page's ViewState from your User Control without the use of reflection.

But, in all honesty, you should abandon the use of ViewState as a data storage medium. Here are some reasons why:

1. ViewState gets rendered and output to the client browser. Maintaining data objects in the collection bloats your Page's output.
2. Unless you have encryption enabled on your ViewState, the encoded string that is rendered to the client browser can be decoded manually and simply anyone can access the content of your data objects. This is a rather significant security vulnerability.


It really sounds like all you want to do is share data between your Page and User Controls. The best way to share data between controls is to make use of the "Items" collection (which is a property of the HttpContext class). The collection is a Hashtable and can be accessed from your Page and User Controls like so:

Context.Items["Workflow"] = workflowInstance;

The best part of using this technique is that it doesn't incur any additional overhead or bloat the Page output. The Items collection exists in the context of a single HTTP request. This means that when your request is done and your Page's output has been rendered to the client browser, the Items collection is cleared from server memory. It's the ideal medium for temporary data storage within ASP.NET.

Now, if you want your data objects to remain accessible for more than just the current request, you'd be better off storing the objects in Session.

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#5
the page viewstate is a different statebag from the viewstate that the usercontrol can access. each control has their own private viewstate. So you cannot directly access the page viewstate from a usercontrol code-behind.

you could expose viewstate values with properties or methods and then call those properties/methods

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