Page::AddOnPreRenderCompleteAsync Method (BeginEventHandler^, EndEventHandler^, Object^)
Registers beginning and ending event handler delegates for an asynchronous page.
Assembly: System.Web (in System.Web.dll)
public: void AddOnPreRenderCompleteAsync( BeginEventHandler^ beginHandler, EndEventHandler^ endHandler, Object^ state )
Parameters
- beginHandler
-
Type:
System.Web::BeginEventHandler^
The delegate for the BeginEventHandler method.
- endHandler
-
Type:
System.Web::EndEventHandler^
The delegate for the EndEventHandler method.
- state
-
Type:
System::Object^
An object containing state information for the event handlers.
| Exception | Condition |
|---|---|
| InvalidOperationException | The <async> page directive is not set to true. - or - The AddOnPreRenderCompleteAsync method is called after the PreRender event. |
| ArgumentNullException | The BeginHandler or EndHandler is null. |
Use the AddOnPreRenderCompleteAsync method to add handlers that require state information to an asynchronous Web page. The object passed in the state parameter can be any object that your application requires to transfer information between event handler delegates specified in the beginHandler and the endHandler parameters.
You can register multiple asynchronous handlers; however, only one handler runs at a time. If you want to process multiple asynchronous methods simultaneously, you should use a single BeginEventHandler method and launch multiple asynchronous operations from that handler.
The asynchronous handlers are called between the PreRender and PreRenderComplete events.
First, all Page events (through the PreRender event) are run, and then each registered BeginEventHandler method is called. When the handler completes, the corresponding EndEventHandler method is called. If there are multiple asynchronous handlers, the next handler is called.
After the registered asynchronous event handlers have been called, the rest of the page events are called, beginning with the PreRenderComplete event.
The following code example uses an asynchronous request to display the HTML source code of the local Web server's default page in a TextBox control.
Security Note
|
|---|
This example has 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. |
Available since 2.0
