SiteMapNode Constructor (SiteMapProvider, String, String, String)
Assembly: System.Web (in system.web.dll)
public SiteMapNode ( SiteMapProvider provider, String key, String url, String title )
public function SiteMapNode ( provider : SiteMapProvider, key : String, url : String, title : String )
Parameters
- provider
The SiteMapProvider with which the node is associated.
- key
A provider-specific lookup key.
- url
The URL of the page that the node represents within the site.
- title
A label for the node, often displayed by navigation controls.
The XmlSiteMapProvider class, which is the default SiteMapProvider provider implementation for ASP.NET, uses the SiteMapNode.Url property as a lookup key, if one is provided for the node (if a URL is not provided, a tracking identifier is generated for the node). Therefore, any SiteMapNode object that provides a URL and is used by the XmlSiteMapProvider must have a unique URL within the scope of the provider.
If no title is provided, calls to the Title property return the String.Empty field.
The following code example demonstrates how to use the SiteMapNode constructor to create a new instance of the SiteMapNode class. The node is initialized with values from a Microsoft Access database row.
This code example is part of a larger example provided for the BuildSiteMap method.
OleDbCommand^ rootNodeCommand = gcnew OleDbCommand ("SELECT nodeid, url, name FROM SiteMap WHERE parentnodeid IS NULL", accessConnection); OleDbDataReader^ rootNodeReader = rootNodeCommand->ExecuteReader(); if ( rootNodeReader->HasRows ) { rootNodeReader->Read(); rootNodeId = rootNodeReader->GetInt32( 0 ); // Create a SiteMapNode that references the current StaticSiteMapProvider. rootNode = gcnew SiteMapNode(this, rootNodeId.ToString(), rootNodeReader->GetString( 1 ),rootNodeReader->GetString( 2 )); } else return nullptr; rootNodeReader->Close();
Windows 98, Windows 2000 SP4, Windows Server 2003, Windows XP Media Center Edition, Windows XP Professional x64 Edition, Windows XP SP2, Windows XP Starter Edition
The .NET Framework does not support all versions of every platform. For a list of the supported versions, see System Requirements.