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MobilePage.AllowCustomAttributes Property

Definition

Gets a value indicating whether controls on the page can have custom attributes defined. The default value is the value of the allowCustomAttributes attribute of the <mobilecontrols> section of the Web.config file. This API is obsolete. For information about how to develop ASP.NET mobile applications, see Mobile Apps & Sites with ASP.NET.

public:
 property bool AllowCustomAttributes { bool get(); void set(bool value); };
[System.ComponentModel.Bindable(false)]
[System.ComponentModel.Browsable(false)]
public bool AllowCustomAttributes { get; set; }
[<System.ComponentModel.Bindable(false)>]
[<System.ComponentModel.Browsable(false)>]
member this.AllowCustomAttributes : bool with get, set
Public Property AllowCustomAttributes As Boolean

Property Value

true if the controls on the page can have custom attributes defined; otherwise, false.

Attributes

Examples

The following example demonstrates how to use the AllowCustomAttributes property to enable the custom AccessKey attribute on the Command.

Note

The following code sample uses the single-file code model and may not work correctly if you copy it directly into a code-behind file. You must copy this code sample into an empty text file that has an .aspx extension. For more information, see ASP.NET Web Forms Page Code Model.

<%@ Page Language="C#" 
    Inherits="System.Web.UI.MobileControls.MobilePage" %>
<%@ Register TagPrefix="mobile" 
    Namespace="System.Web.UI.MobileControls" 
    Assembly="System.Web.Mobile" %>
<%@ Import Namespace="System.Web.Mobile" %>

<script runat="server">
    // <Snippet2>
    private void Command_OnClick(object sender, EventArgs e)
    {
        // Display the other form
        if (ActiveForm.ID == "Form1")
            ActiveForm = Form2;
        else
            ActiveForm = Form1;
    }
    // </Snippet2>

    public bool isAccessKey(MobileCapabilities caps, 
        string optValue)
    {
        // Determine if the browser is not a Web crawler 
        // and can use access keys
        if (!caps.Crawler && caps.SupportsAccesskeyAttribute)
            return true;
        return false;
    }
</script>

<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" >
<body>
    <mobile:Form runat="server" id="Form1" >
        <mobile:Label Runat="server">This is Form1</mobile:Label>
        <mobile:Command id="cmd1" runat="server" Text="No AccessKey" 
            onClick="Command_OnClick">
            <DeviceSpecific>
               <Choice Filter="isAccessKey" Text="AccessKey is 1"/>
            </DeviceSpecific>
        </mobile:Command>
        <mobile:Label id="Label1" runat="server" />
    </mobile:Form>
    <mobile:Form ID="Form2" Runat="server">
        <mobile:Label Runat="server">This is Form2</mobile:Label>
        <mobile:Command id="cmd2" runat="server" text="Back to Form1"
            onClick="Command_OnClick">
            <DeviceSpecific>
                <Choice Filter="isAccessKey" Text="1 is AccessKey" AccessKey="1" />
            </DeviceSpecific>
        </mobile:Command>
    </mobile:Form>
</body>
</html>
<%@ Page Language="VB" 
    Inherits="System.Web.UI.MobileControls.MobilePage" %>
<%@ Register TagPrefix="mobile" 
    Namespace="System.Web.UI.MobileControls" 
    Assembly="System.Web.Mobile" %>
<%@ Import Namespace="System.Web.Mobile" %>

<script runat="server">
    ' <Snippet2>
    Private Sub Command_OnClick(ByVal sender As Object, ByVal e As EventArgs)
        ' Display the other form
        If ActiveForm.ID = "Form1" Then
            ActiveForm = Form2
        Else
            ActiveForm = Form1
        End If
    End Sub
    ' </Snippet2>

    Public Function isAccessKey(ByVal caps As MobileCapabilities, _
        ByVal optValue As String) As Boolean
        
        ' Determine if the browser is not a Web crawler 
        ' and can use access keys
        If Not caps.Crawler AndAlso caps.SupportsAccesskeyAttribute Then
            Return True
        End If
        Return False
    End Function

</script>

<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" >
<body>
    <mobile:Form runat="server" id="Form1" >
        <mobile:Label ID="Label1" Runat="server">This is Form1</mobile:Label>
        <mobile:Command id="cmd1" runat="server" Text="No AccessKey" 
            onClick="Command_OnClick">
            <DeviceSpecific>
               <Choice Filter="isAccessKey" Text="AccessKey is 1"/>
            </DeviceSpecific>
        </mobile:Command>
        <mobile:Label id="Label2" runat="server" />
    </mobile:Form>
    <mobile:Form ID="Form2" Runat="server">
        <mobile:Label ID="Label3" Runat="server">This is Form2</mobile:Label>
        <mobile:Command id="cmd2" runat="server" text="Back to Form1"
            onClick="Command_OnClick">
            <DeviceSpecific>
                <Choice Filter="isAccessKey" Text="1 is AccessKey" AccessKey="1" />
            </DeviceSpecific>
        </mobile:Command>
    </mobile:Form>
</body>
</html>

Remarks

In addition to the IAttributeAccessor interface, the ASP.NET page framework provides a CustomAttributes dictionary that allows you to specify additional attributes, enable or disable custom attributing, or adjust a control's behavior or rendering. To enable or disable custom attributing, you can either set the AllowCustomAttributes property to true, or you can set the allowCustomAttributes attribute of the <mobileControls> section of Web.config to true.

Note

When custom attributes are enabled, typographic errors in property names can be interpreted as custom attributes. For example, if a developer incorrectly specifies the Text property of a control as "Txet", the parser would save it as a custom attribute called "Txet" instead of raising an exception. For this reason, custom attributes are disabled by default.

Applies to

See also