Reference app relative virtual paths in .css file

2020-02-17 06:56发布

Assume I have an "images" folder directory under the root of my application. How can I, from within a .css file, reference an image in this directory using an ASP.NET app relative path.

Example:

When in development, the path of ~/Images/Test.gif might resolve to /MyApp/Images/Test.gif while, in production, it might resolve to /Images/Test.gif (depending on the virtual directory for the application). I, obviously, want to avoid having to modify the .css file between environments.

I know you can use Page.ResolveClientUrl to inject a url into a control's Style collection dynamically at render time. I would like to avoid doing this.

8条回答
乱世女痞
2楼-- · 2020-02-17 07:13

Marcel Popescu's solution is using Request.ApplicationPath in the css file.

Never use Request.ApplicationPath - it is evil! Returns different results depending on the path!

Use the following instead.

background-image: url(<%= Page.ResolveUrl("~/images/bg_content.gif") %>);
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男人必须洒脱
3楼-- · 2020-02-17 07:14

Put your dynamic CSS in a user control in an .ascx file and then you do not need to run all your css files through the asp.net page processer.

<%@ Control %>
<style type="text/css>
div.content
{
background-image:(url(<%= Page.ResolveUrl("~/images/image.png") %>);
}
</style>

But the easiest way to solve the ~ problem is to not use a ~ at all. In Visual Studio, in Solution Explorer, right click your application, select Properties Window and change the Virtual Path to /.

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干净又极端
4楼-- · 2020-02-17 07:17

Make you life easy, just put images used in your CSS in the /css/ folder alongside /css/style.css. Then when you reference your images, use relative paths (e.g. url(images/image.jpg)).

I still keep images that are displayed with a <img> in an /images/ folder. Photos for example are content, they are not part of the website's skin/theme. Thus, they do not belong in the /css/ folder.

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不美不萌又怎样
5楼-- · 2020-02-17 07:18

Unfortunately Firefox has a stupid bug here... the paths are relative to the path of the page, instead of being relative to the position of the CSS file. Which means if you have pages in different positions in the tree (like having Default.aspx in the root and Information.aspx in the View folder) there's no way to have working relative paths. (IE will correctly solve the paths relative to the location of the CSS file.)

The only thing I could find is this comment on http://www.west-wind.com/weblog/posts/269.aspx but, to be honest, I haven't managed to make it work yet. If I do I'll edit this comment:

re: Making sense of ASP.Net Paths by Russ Brooks February 25, 2006 @ 8:43 am

No one fully answered Brant's question about the image paths inside the CSS file itself. I've got the answer. The question was, "How do we use application-relative image paths INSIDE the CSS file?" I have long been frustrated by this very problem too, so I just spent the last 3 hours working out a solution.

The solution is to run your CSS files through the ASPX page handler, then use a small bit of server-side code in each of the paths to output the root application path. Ready?

  1. Add to web.config:
 <compilation debug="true">
 <!-- Run CSS files through the ASPX handler so we can write code in them. -->
 <buildProviders>
 <add extension=".css" type="System.Web.Compilation.PageBuildProvider" />
 </buildProviders>
 </compilation>

 <httpHandlers>
 <add path="*.css" verb="GET" type="System.Web.UI.PageHandlerFactory" validate="true" />
 </httpHandlers>
  1. Inside your CSS, use the Request.ApplicationPath property wherever a path exists, like this:

    #content { background: url(<%= Request.ApplicationPath %>/images/bg_content.gif) repeat-y; }

  2. .NET serves up ASPX pages with a MIME type of "text/html" by default, consequently, your new server-side CSS pages are served up with this MIME type which causes non-IE browsers to not read the CSS file correctly. We need to override this to be "text/css". Simply add this line as the first line of your CSS file:

    <%@ ContentType="text/css" %>
    
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何必那么认真
6楼-- · 2020-02-17 07:20

I was having difficulty in getting background images to display for content containers and have tried many solutions similar to other posted here. I had set the relative path in the CSS file, set it as a style on the aspx page I wanted the background to display - nothing worked. I tried Marcel Popescu's solution and it still didn't work.

I did end up getting it to work following a combination of Marcel's solution and trial and error. I inserted the code into the web.config, inserted the text/css line into my CSS file but I removed the background property in the CSS file altogether and set it as a style on the content container in the aspx page I wanted the background to display.

It does mean that for each or any other pages that I want to display the background I will need to set the style background property but it works beautifully.

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我命由我不由天
7楼-- · 2020-02-17 07:27

Inside of the .css file you can use relative paths; so in your example, say you put your css file in ~/Styles/mystyles.css. You can use url(../Images/Test.gif) as an example.

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