Book Image

ASP.NET 3.5 CMS Development

Book Image

ASP.NET 3.5 CMS Development

Overview of this book

ASP.NET 3.5 is equipped with a built-in security system, standard design templates, and easy configurations for database connections, which make it the ideal language for building a content management system. With the strong community support for the ASP.NET platform, you can be assured that what you write today will be around and supported for years to come. You can imagine how easy it is to get lost in the myriad features especially if you are a newcomer. This book shows you how to make use of ASP.NET's features and create a functional Content Management System quickly and conveniently. You will learn how to build your site and see the different ways in which you can customize your code to fit your needs. With this book in hand, you can easily set up users and groups, create valuable content for your users, and manage the layout of your site efficiently. All you need is a basic understanding of coding and a desire to learn, and this book will take care of the rest. This book will teach you to get your site up and running quickly, and maintain its content even if you have little or no web design or programming experience. It will give you all the knowledge you need to use the tools as well as the code required to make yourself a strong developer far beyond your site. It begins with setting up your programming environment and coding a Content Management System. You will learn how to install and configure a database and connect it to your CMS. You will be able to create content and manage the layout of your site, and also make it available beyond the browser. At the end of this book, you will have designed and built a CMS that allows you to administer an Articles section, Images and Files sections, as well as a full set of Administrator tools for your site.
Table of Contents (14 chapters)
ASP.NET 3.5 Content Management System Development
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewer
Preface

File upload control and beyond


When building a CMS, one of the most important features you can have on your site is the ability to allow users to upload and view documents, images, files, and so on. For getting these files on to the web server—where they need to be for everyone to access them—you really have two basic choices. The first is a manual way where the file is delivered to someone (through email or disc) and then that person directly copies the files on to the server. The second way is to allow the users to upload these files directly to the server from their own computer. For reasons that are pretty obvious, you will usually opt for the second choice. For doing these direct uploads, one of the most common ways is to use the <asp:FileUpload />. The heart/core of this control is really nothing new, and has been around for quite a while. If you look at the control and what the rendered HTML is for this control, you will see that it's an <input type="file" /> tag. This...