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c# - Get All Web Controls of a Specific Type on a Page

I have been pondering how I can get all controls on a page and then perform a task on them in this related question:

How to Search Through a C# DropDownList Programmatically

I need code that can scan the page, get all DropDownList Controls and return them in a list.

I'm currently having to edit each individual control, I would rather be able to dynamically loop over each control to preform my task.

See Question&Answers more detail:os

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Check my previous SO answer.

Basically, the idea is to wrap the recursion of iterating through the controls collection using :

private void GetControlList<T>(ControlCollection controlCollection, List<T> resultCollection)
where T : Control
{
    foreach (Control control in controlCollection)
    {
        //if (control.GetType() == typeof(T))
        if (control is T) // This is cleaner
            resultCollection.Add((T)control);

        if (control.HasControls())
            GetControlList(control.Controls, resultCollection);
    }
}

and to use it :

List<DropDownList> allControls = new List<DropDownList>();
GetControlList<DropDownList>(Page.Controls, allControls )
foreach (var childControl in allControls )
{
//     call for all controls of the page
}

[Edited 11/26/2013]: here is a more elegant way to reach this goal. I wrote two extensions methods that can walk the control tree in both directions. The methods are written in a more Linq way as it produces an enumerable:

/// <summary>
/// Provide utilities methods related to <see cref="Control"/> objects
/// </summary>
public static class ControlUtilities
{
    /// <summary>
    /// Find the first ancestor of the selected control in the control tree
    /// </summary>
    /// <typeparam name="TControl">Type of the ancestor to look for</typeparam>
    /// <param name="control">The control to look for its ancestors</param>
    /// <returns>The first ancestor of the specified type, or null if no ancestor is found.</returns>
    public static TControl FindAncestor<TControl>(this Control control) where TControl : Control
    {
        if (control == null) throw new ArgumentNullException("control");

        Control parent = control;
        do
        {
            parent = parent.Parent;
            var candidate = parent as TControl;
            if (candidate != null)
            {
                return candidate;
            }
        } while (parent != null);
        return null;
    }

    /// <summary>
    /// Finds all descendants of a certain type of the specified control.
    /// </summary>
    /// <typeparam name="TControl">The type of descendant controls to look for.</typeparam>
    /// <param name="parent">The parent control where to look into.</param>
    /// <returns>All corresponding descendants</returns>
    public static IEnumerable<TControl> FindDescendants<TControl>(this Control parent) where TControl : Control
    {
        if (parent == null) throw new ArgumentNullException("control");

        if (parent.HasControls())
        {
            foreach (Control childControl in parent.Controls)
            {
                var candidate = childControl as TControl;
                if (candidate != null) yield return candidate;

                foreach (var nextLevel in FindDescendants<TControl>(childControl))
                {
                    yield return nextLevel;
                }
            }
        }
    }
}

Thanks to the this keyword, these methods are extensions methods and can simplify the code.

For example, to find all DropDownList in the page, you can simply call:

var allDropDowns = this.Page.FindControl<DropDownList>();

Because of the use of the yield keyword, and because Linq is smart enough to defer execution of the enumeration, you can call (for example):

var allDropDowns = this.Page.FindDescendants<DropDownList>();
var firstDropDownWithCustomClass = allDropDowns.First(
    ddl=>ddl.CssClass == "customclass"
    );

The enumeration will stop as soon as the predicate in the First method is satisfied. The whole control tree won't be walked.


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