I was recently asked about getting a Progress Bar to work in ASP.Net. It didn't need to be a progress bar that had a percentage, just something that would alert a user that something is happening behind the scenes.
So I did some Google searching, and found tons of resources where people had created their own Progress Bar controls. While that was all fine and good, I wasn't looking to download somebody else's custom control, and I wasn't going to make my own. So I wanted to figure out how I could use existing ASP.Net and AJAX controls to accomplish this task.
It turned out to be easier than I thought it would be.
I knew that I needed the progress bar to show modally, so that the user would not be able to interact with the form during the postback. So I decided to use the
ModalPopupExtender AJAX control.
So first, I have my
Button, the
ModalPopupExtender, the
Panel that the extender will display, the
Script Manager, and a
hidden control.
html
<asp:ScriptManager ID="ScriptManager1" runat="server" />
<asp:UpdatePanel ID="UpdatePanel1" runat="server">
<ContentTemplate>
<div>
<asp:Button ID="btnSubmit" OnClick="btnSubmit_Click" OnClientClick="StartProgressBar()"
runat="server" Text="Submit Time" Width="170px" />
<ajaxToolkit:ModalPopupExtender ID="ProgressBarModalPopupExtender" runat="server"
BackgroundCssClass="ModalBackground" BehaviorID="ProgressBarModalPopupExtender"
TargetControlID="hiddenField" PopupControlID="Panel1" />
<asp:Panel ID="Panel1" runat="server" Style="display: none; background-color: #C0C0C0;">
<img src="progressbar.gif" alt="" />
</asp:Panel>
<asp:HiddenField ID="hiddenField" runat="server" />
</div>
</ContentTemplate>
</asp:UpdatePanel>
If you notice, the
TargetControlID attribute of the extender is NOT the button. The reason for this is that the default functionality of the
ModalPopupExtender is to require a button click from the
Panel to close it. Since I want the
Panel to stay visible while the server does it's processing, I set the
TargetControlID to the hidden control.
Another thing to notice is the
BackgroundCssClass attribute of the
ModalPopupExtender. This is
REQUIRED for the extender to actual be modal. Without it, the extender is a non-modal popup.(more on this later)
Also notice that the
Button has both of the click events populated. The
OnClick event will be the server-side event handler.
c#
protected void btnSubmit_Click(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
Thread.Sleep(7000);
ProgressBarModalPopupExtender.Hide();
}
This event simply pauses server processing for 7 seconds to simulate a long running process.
The
OnClientClick event will be calling a javascript function...
CODE
<script language="javascript" type="text/javascript">
function StartProgressBar() {
var myExtender = $find('ProgressBarModalPopupExtender');
myExtender.show();
return true;
}
</script>
And last, the CSS entry for the background of the
ModalPopupExtender.
If you do not already have a CSS class added to your project, you will need to add one, and link it to the page in the
HEAD tag.
CODE
<link href="main.css" rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" />
Then add this entry to the CSS file.
CODE
.ModalBackground
{
background-color:Gray;
filter:alpha(opacity=50);
-moz-opacity:0.5;
-khtml-opacity: 0.5;
opacity: 0.5;
}
If using Visual Studio 2008, you will get warnings saying that "filter" and "opacity" are not known CSS properties. This is an issue with Visual Studio. They are valid properties and they do work. The 4 properties that are listed in the CSS entry should handle the opacity for all major browsers. I have tested with IE7, Firefox 3.5, and Chrome.
And that is all you have to do. The ModalPopupExtender will show when the button is clicked, and the server will start processing the code. When the server has completed and sends the response back to the browser, it will hide the ModalPopupExtender.