OnClick vs OnClientClick for an asp:CheckBox? OnClick vs OnClientClick for an asp:CheckBox? asp.net asp.net

OnClick vs OnClientClick for an asp:CheckBox?


That is very weird. I checked the CheckBox documentation page which reads

<asp:CheckBox id="CheckBox1"      AutoPostBack="True|False"     Text="Label"     TextAlign="Right|Left"     Checked="True|False"     OnCheckedChanged="OnCheckedChangedMethod"     runat="server"/>

As you can see, there is no OnClick or OnClientClick attributes defined.

Keeping this in mind, I think this is what is happening.

When you do this,

<asp:CheckBox runat="server" OnClick="alert(this.checked);" />

ASP.NET doesn't modify the OnClick attribute and renders it as is on the browser. It would be rendered as:

  <input type="checkbox" OnClick="alert(this.checked);" />

Obviously, a browser can understand 'OnClick' and puts an alert.

And in this scenario

<asp:CheckBox runat="server" OnClientClick="alert(this.checked);" />

Again, ASP.NET won't change the OnClientClick attribute and will render it as

<input type="checkbox" OnClientClick="alert(this.checked);" />

As browser won't understand OnClientClick nothing will happen. It also won't raise any error as it is just another attribute.

You can confirm above by looking at the rendered HTML.

And yes, this is not intuitive at all.


Because they are two different kinds of controls...

You see, your web browser doesn't know about server side programming. it only knows about it's own DOM and the event models that it uses... And for click events of objects rendered to it. You should examine the final markup that is actually sent to the browser from ASP.Net to see the differences your self.

<asp:CheckBox runat="server" OnClick="alert(this.checked);" />

renders to

<input type="check" OnClick="alert(this.checked);" />

and

<asp:CheckBox runat="server" OnClientClick="alert(this.checked);" />

renders to

<input type="check" OnClientClick="alert(this.checked);" />

Now, as near as i can recall, there are no browsers anywhere that support the "OnClientClick" event in their DOM...

When in doubt, always view the source of the output as it is sent to the browser... there's a whole world of debug information that you can see.


You are right this is inconsistent. What is happening is that CheckBox doesn't HAVE an server-side OnClick event, so your markup gets rendered to the browser. http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/system.web.ui.webcontrols.checkbox_events.aspx

Whereas Button does have a OnClick - so ASP.NET expects a reference to an event in your OnClick markup.