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Walkthrough: Introduction to the Timer Control

In this walkthrough you will update part of a Web page at a timed interval by using three ASP.NET AJAX server controls: the ScriptManager control, the UpdatePanel control, and the Timer control. Adding these controls to a page eliminates the need to refresh the whole page with each postback. Only the contents of the UpdatePanel control will be updated.

For more information about partial-page rendering, see Partial-Page Rendering Overview.

Prerequisites

To implement the procedures in this walkthrough you need:

  • Microsoft Visual Studio 2005 or Visual Web Developer Express.

  • An AJAX-enabled ASP.NET Web site.

To refresh an UpdatePanel control at a timed interval

  1. In Microsoft Visual Studio 2005 or Visual Web Developer Express, create a new AJAX-enabled ASP.NET Web page and switch to Design view.

  2. If the page does not already contain a ScriptManager control, in the AJAX Extensions tab of the toolbox, double-click the ScriptManager control to add it to the page.

    Timer Control Tutorial Step 1

  3. In the toolbox, double-click the UpdatePanel control to add it to the page.

    Timer Control Tutorial Step 2

  4. Click inside the UpdatePanel control and then double-click the Timer control to add it to the UpdatePanel control.

    Timer Control Tutorial Step 3

    Note

    The Timer control can work as a trigger either inside or outside an UpdatePanel control. This example shows how to use the Timer control inside an UpdatePanel control. For an example of using a Timer control as a trigger outside an UpdatePanel control, see Walkthrough: Using the ASP.NET Timer Control with Multiple UpdatePanel Controls.

  5. Set the Interval property of the Timer control to 10000.

    The Interval property is defined in milliseconds, so that setting the Interval property to 10,000 milliseconds will refresh the UpdatePanel control every 10 seconds.

    Note

    In this example, the timer interval is set to 10 seconds. That way, when you run the example, you do not have to wait a long time to see the results. However, each timer interval causes a postback to the server and causes network traffic. Therefore, in a production application, you should set the interval to the longest time that is still practical for your application.

  6. Click inside the UpdatePanel control and then in the Standard tab of the toolbox, double-click the Label control to add it to the UpdatePanel control.

    Note

    Make sure that you add the Label control inside the UpdatePanel control.

    Timer Control Tutorial Step 4

  7. Set the label's Text property to Panel not refreshed yet.

  8. Click outside the UpdatePanel control and double-click the Label control to add a second label outside the UpdatePanel control.

    Note

    Make sure that you add the second Label control outside the UpdatePanel control.

    Timer Control Tutorial Step 5

  9. Double-click the Timer control to create a handler for the Tick event.

  10. Add code that sets the Text property of the Label1 control to the current time.

  11. Create a Page_Load handler and add code that sets the Text property of the Label2 control to the time that the page is created.

  12. Switch to Source view.

    Make sure that the markup for the page resembles the following:

    Partial Class _Default
        Inherits System.Web.UI.Page
    
        Protected Sub Page_Load(ByVal sender As Object, ByVal e As System.EventArgs) Handles Me.Load
            Label2.Text = "Page created at: " & _
              DateTime.Now.ToLongTimeString()
        End Sub
    
        Protected Sub Timer1_Tick(ByVal sender As Object, ByVal e As System.EventArgs)
            Label1.Text = "Panel refreshed at: " & _
              DateTime.Now.ToLongTimeString()
    
        End Sub
    End Class
    
    public partial class _Default : System.Web.UI.Page 
    {
        protected void Page_Load(object sender, EventArgs e)
        {
            Label2.Text = "Page created at: " +
              DateTime.Now.ToLongTimeString();
        }
        protected void Timer1_Tick(object sender, EventArgs e)
        {
            Label1.Text = "Panel refreshed at: " +
              DateTime.Now.ToLongTimeString();
        }
    }
    
  13. Save your changes and press CTRL+F5 to view the page in a browser.

  14. Wait at least 10 seconds for panel to refresh.

    The text inside the panel changes to display the last time that the panel's content was refreshed. However, the text outside the panel is not refreshed.

Review

This walkthrough introduced the basic concepts of using a Timer control and an UpdatePanel control to enable partial-page updates. You must add a ScriptManager control to any page that contains an UpdatePanel control or Timer control. By default, a Timer control inside the panel will cause just the panel to refresh during an asynchronous postback. A Timer control outside a panel can cause the UpdatePanel to be refreshed if it is configured as a trigger for the panel.

The next step is to learn about how to use the Timer control outside an UpdatePanel control and about how to use the timer to update more than one UpdatePanel control. For information about these tasks, see Walkthrough: Using the ASP.NET Timer Control with Multiple UpdatePanel Controls.

See Also

Concepts

Timer Control Overview

Partial-Page Rendering Overview

Reference

Timer

UpdatePanel

ScriptManager