I don't understand what the AutoEventWireUp
page property is responsible for.
I've read through this article, but even that I don't understand.
See Question&Answers more detail:osI don't understand what the AutoEventWireUp
page property is responsible for.
I've read through this article, but even that I don't understand.
See Question&Answers more detail:osWhen a Page is requested, it raises various events which are considered to be part of it's lifecycle. I keep the visual representation created by Peter Bromberg handy with me.
The AutoEventWireUp
property when True, automatically wires up some of these built-in events in the Page life cycle to their handlers. This means that you do not need to explicitly attach these events (using the Handles keyword, for instance, in VB).
Examples of these built-in events would be Page_Init
and Page_Load
.
If you set AutoEventWireUp
to True and provide explicit wiring up of the EventHandlers, you will find them being executed twice! This is one reason why Visual Studio keeps this attribute set to false
by default.
Edit: (after Chester89's comment)
It is useful to note that the default value of the AutoEventWireUp
attribute of the Page is true
, while the default value of the AutoEventWireUp
property of the Page class is false