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Tips and Tricks
Thursday, November 18, 2010PrintSubscribe
Detecting Attempts to Access a Protected Page

Q. I built an application using web site factory. The application has a
dedicated login page. If I login as "admin" and navigate to the
membership page, then log out and log back in as "user" (which does
not have rights to the membership page), I get stuck. I think because
"user" does not have rights to visit the last page I visited before I
logged out, I can not get past the login page without logging back in
as admin, navigating off of membership page, then logging back out.

A.

This is the standard ASP.NET behavior. You are signed in as a "user" but the redirect URL still tries to access the membership page, which "user" is not accessible to "user" account.

There are two options to fix that:

1) Offer a static link to the home page of your application in ~/App_Code/Controls/Login.acxs. User can click on the link to access the home page and break the login auto-redirects.

2) Add the following line of code into ~/App_Code/Controls/Login.ascx.cs:

using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Linq;
using System.Web;
using System.Web.UI;
using System.Web.UI.WebControls;

public partial class Controls_Welcome : System.Web.UI.UserControl
{
    
    protected void Page_Load(object sender, EventArgs e)
    {
        if (Page.User.Identity.IsAuthenticated && 
                !String.IsNullOrEmpty(Request.Params["ReturnUrl"]))
            Response.Redirect("~/Pages/Home.aspx");
    }
}

The code will detect the RedirectUrl parameter in the page URL and redirect the user to home automatically.

Saturday, November 13, 2010PrintSubscribe
Order Form Sample

In this tutorial we will detail the process of creating a custom Order Form with Code On Time generator and Web Site Factory project. We will customize the sample application generated straight from the Northwind database.

Customization includes creating a new page, adding data views to the page, configuring data controllers to calculate the extended priced of order detail records, the subtotal and total amounts of the order, and freight charges. We will also apply a custom template to alter the presentation of the form.

The screen shot below represents the final product of project customization.

image

Here is the same form rendered in “read-only” mode.

image

 Download this tutorial now! (6172K)

Watch the tutorial on our YouTube channel:

Part 1: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ekb8_S7YaRM

Part 2: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=syGsUTuK2ZE

Part 3: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zImXeWos1U0

Friday, October 8, 2010PrintSubscribe
Detecting Lookup Field Changes

Here is the screen shot of the New Products screen from the Northwind sample. Suppose you want to implement detection of value change in Supplier Company Name lookup that must result in clearing of Category Name along with resetting of Reorder Level field to 100.

image

Open your project and click Design button to activate the project designer. Select All Controllers tab and click on Products data controller. Click Edit button and enter ProductsBusinessRules in the Handler field in Business Rules section. Click Save to persist the changes.

image

Select the same data controller once more and click on Fields tab. Select CategoryID field and click Edit button. Select the check box in General section labeled “The value of the field is calculated by a business rule expression”. Scroll down to Dynamic Properties section and enter SupplierID in ContextFields. Click OK to save the changes.

image

From now on any changes to the SupplierID field in the client web browser will trigger a server side event that will be handled by methods in ProductsBusinessRules class. The class definition will be automatically generated once and will not be overwritten by the code generator in the future.

Now it is time to add the business logic that will react to the changes in the SupplierID fields.

The business rules class is located in ~/App_Code/Rules/ProductsBusinessRules.vb(cs) file.

The first example below is written in Visual Basic.NET. 

Here is how it implements the logic described at the top of this article.  Attribute ControllerAction on method ResondeTOChangeInSupplierID will ensure that the method is invoked in response to the system action “Calculate” when any of the fields specified in Context Fields property of CategoryID is changed in the client browser.

Notice that we are assigning text “(select)”  to the CategoryCategoryName field. This field is an alias for the CategoryID. You can also change any unrelated fields as well such ReorderLevel.

The last updated data field will be focused on the client.

Imports MyCompany.Data
Imports System
Imports System.Collections.Generic
Imports System.Data
Imports System.Linq

Namespace MyCompany.Rules
    
    Partial Public Class ProductsBusinessRules
        Inherits MyCompany.Data.BusinessRules

        <ControllerAction("Products", "Calculate", "CategoryID")> _
        Sub RespondToChangeInSupplierID(ByVal supplierID As Nullable(Of Integer))
            If supplierID.HasValue Then
                UpdateFieldValue("ReorderLevel", 100)
            Else
                UpdateFieldValue("ReorderLevel", Nothing)
            End If
            UpdateFieldValue("CategoryCategoryName", "(select)")
            UpdateFieldValue("CategoryID", Nothing)
        End Sub
    End Class
End Namespace

The C# version of the same business rule is presented next.

using System;
using System.Data;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Linq;
using MyCompany.Data;

namespace MyCompany.Rules
{
    public partial class ProductsBusinessRules : MyCompany.Data.BusinessRules
    {
        [ControllerAction("Products", "Calculate", "CategoryID")]
        public void RespondToChangeInSupplierID(int? supplierID)
        {
            if (supplierID.HasValue)
                UpdateFieldValue("ReorderLevel", 100);
            else
                UpdateFieldValue("ReorderLevel", null);
            UpdateFieldValue("CategoryCategoryName", "(select)");
            UpdateFieldValue("CategoryID", null);
        }
    }
}

The screen shot of the New Products  form just after the selection of a supplier is presented below.

image