views:

272

answers:

3

Hi All,

Firstly, "Modifying" may be the wrong term, I see a few people have posted online just asking whether they can actually modify an embedded resource. What I am wanting to to, is use a resource in my assembly as a kind of template which I would do a find and replace on before registering it on the page - is this possible?

For example; say I have a few lines of jQuery as an embedded resource in my assembly and in this script I am referencing a CSS class name that can be set by the front-end programmer. Since I do not know what the CSS class will be until implementation, is there a way of going through the embedded resource and replacing, say, $myclass$ with ThisClassName.

Any help would be appreciated, if it's not possible then at least tell me so I can stop chasing my tail.

A: 

In you codebehind you could read the contents of the embedded resource, switch out whatever you want, and then write the new contents to the response. Something like this:

protected void Page_Load(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
    string contents = ReadEmbeddedResource("ClassLibrary1", "ClassLibrary1.TestJavaScript.js");
    //replace part of contents
    //write new contents to response
    Response.Write(String.Format("<script>{0}</script>", contents));
}

private string ReadEmbeddedResource(string assemblyName, string resouceName)
{
    var assembly = Assembly.Load(assemblyName);
    using (var stream = assembly.GetManifestResourceStream(resouceName))
    using(var reader = new StreamReader(stream))
    {
        return reader.ReadToEnd();
    }
}
Matt Dearing
Thanks for your answer. This is pretty similar to what I actually want to do, but I need it to be an include rather than a script block as you have it above.
No Average Geek
+1  A: 

I have solved my little issue by creating an HTTP Handler. In this instance it's called DynamicClientScript.axd.

I have taken a few cuts from my code to give you an idea. The code below gets the standard embedded resource URL and takes the query string from it to add to the path to my handler.

    /// <summary>
    /// Gets the dynamic web resource URL to reference on the page.
    /// </summary>
    /// <param name="type">The type of the resource.</param>
    /// <param name="resourceName">Name of the resource.</param>
    /// <returns>Path to the web resource.</returns>
    public string GetScriptResourceUrl(Type type, string resourceName)
    {
        this.scriptResourceUrl = this.currentPage.ClientScript.GetWebResourceUrl(type, resourceName);

        string resourceQueryString = this.scriptResourceUrl.Substring(this.scriptResourceUrl.IndexOf("d="));

        DynamicScriptSessionManager sessMngr = new DynamicScriptSessionManager();
        Guid paramGuid = sessMngr.StoreScriptParameters(this.Parameters);

        return string.Format("/DynamicScriptResource.axd?{0}&paramGuid={1}", resourceQueryString, paramGuid.ToString());
    }

    /// <summary>
    /// Registers the client script include.
    /// </summary>
    /// <param name="key">The key of the client script include to register.</param>
    /// <param name="type">The type of the resource.</param>
    /// <param name="resourceName">Name of the resource.</param>
    public void RegisterClientScriptInclude(string key, Type type, string resourceName)
    {
        this.currentPage.ClientScript.RegisterClientScriptInclude(key, this.GetScriptResourceUrl(type, resourceName));
    }

The handler then takes its query string to build the URL to the standard resource. Reads the resource and replaces each key with it's value within the dictionary collection (DynamicClientScriptParameters).

The paramGuid is an identifier used to get the correct script parameter collection.

What the handler does...

        public void ProcessRequest(HttpContext context)
    {
        string d = HttpContext.Current.Request.QueryString["d"]; 
        string t = HttpContext.Current.Request.QueryString["t"];
        string paramGuid = HttpContext.Current.Request.QueryString["paramGuid"];

        string urlFormatter = "http://" + HttpContext.Current.Request.Url.Host + "/WebResource.axd?d={0}&t={1)";

        // URL to resource.
        string url = string.Format(urlFormatter, d, t);

        string strResult = string.Empty;

        WebResponse objResponse;
        WebRequest objRequest = System.Net.HttpWebRequest.Create(url);

        objResponse = objRequest.GetResponse();

        using (StreamReader sr = new StreamReader(objResponse.GetResponseStream()))
        {
            strResult = sr.ReadToEnd();

            // Close and clean up the StreamReader
            sr.Close();
        }

        DynamicScriptSessionManager sessionManager = (DynamicScriptSessionManager)HttpContext.Current.Application["DynamicScriptSessionManager"];

        DynamicClientScriptParameters parameters = null;

        foreach (var item in sessionManager)
        {
            Guid guid = new Guid(paramGuid);

            if (item.SessionID == guid)
            {
                parameters = item.DynamicScriptParameters;
            }
        }

        foreach (var item in parameters)
        {
            strResult = strResult.Replace("$" + item.Key + "$", item.Value);
        }

        // Display results to a webpage
        context.Response.Write(strResult);
    }

Then in my code where I want to reference my resource I use the following.

            DynamicClientScript dcs = new DynamicClientScript(this.GetType(), "MyNamespace.MyScriptResource.js");

        dcs.Parameters.Add("myParam", "myValue");

        dcs.RegisterClientScriptInclude("scriptKey");

Then say my script resource contains:

alert('$myParam$');

It will output as if it was:

alert('myValue');

My code also does some caching (using the DynamicScriptSessionManager) but you get the idea...

Cheers

No Average Geek
A: 

Mr "No Average Geek", Thank you for your answer and this is what I was looking for. I need to include the script not to put it as block. could you please send me the entire code please. you can find my email: [email protected]