PasswordRecovery::UserNameTemplate Property

 

Gets or sets the template used to display the UserName view of the PasswordRecovery control.

Namespace:   System.Web.UI.WebControls
Assembly:  System.Web (in System.Web.dll)

public:
[BrowsableAttribute(false)]
[PersistenceModeAttribute(PersistenceMode::InnerProperty)]
[TemplateContainerAttribute((PasswordRecovery^::typeid))]
property ITemplate^ UserNameTemplate {
	virtual ITemplate^ get();
	virtual void set(ITemplate^ value);
}

Property Value

Type: System.Web.UI::ITemplate^

An ITemplate that contains the template for displaying the PasswordRecovery control in UserName view. The default is null.

The UserNameTemplate property contains the template that defines the appearance of the PasswordRecovery control in UserName view.

The following table lists the required and optional controls used in the UserName view template.

ID or Command name

Control type

Required/optional

UserName

Any control that implements IEditableTextControl.

Optional

Submit

Any control that causes event bubbling.

Optional

The Submit control can be any control that causes event bubbling, such as Button, LinkButton, or ImageButton. The control's CommandName property must be set to "Submit".

The PasswordRecovery control throws an HttpException exception if the UserName view does not contain the required controls. No exception is thrown if you give an optional control ID to a control of the wrong type; however, the control is subsequently ignored by the PasswordRecovery control.

When you use a template to define the appearance of the UserName view, only the following properties affect the behavior of the control:

All other properties are inactive when you use a template for the UserName view of the PasswordRecovery control.

The following code example uses the UserNameTemplate property to define a template for the UserName view of the PasswordRecovery control that enables the user to choose the domain that contains his or her login information.

System_CAPS_security Security Note

This example contains a text box that accepts user input, which is a potential security threat. By default, ASP.NET Web pages validate that user input does not include script or HTML elements. For more information, see Script Exploits Overview.

No code example is currently available or this language may not be supported.

.NET Framework
Available since 2.0
Return to top
Show: