Introduction
Inspired by a question in the CodeProject's ASP.NET forum, I decided to quick-assemble some code for displaying emoticons within a web page.
Displaying emoticons is the task of replacing text-fragments within a string (e.g. ":-)", ":-(" ) by some HTML code that displays an image (e.g. and ). So simple spoken, the whole project is a nicely encapsulated string-replace that hopefully is useful to the guy who asked the question, as well as to other programmers.
Description
The project contains a ready-to-compile-and-run Visual Studio 2003 solution with one Web Form web page Index.aspx to test out the functionality. The effective code is contained within the class Emoticon
in the file Emoticons.cs.
The class Emoticon
has two static
members. The first is:
public static Emoticon[] All
to get a collection of all available emoticons. Within this member, the actual references to the image files are created, so if you want to add your own emoticons, you must place the news images within the Emoticons subfolder and modify this member to "know" the new emoticons.
The second static
member is the function:
public static string Format( string input )
This member function does the core replacement of an input string with the HTML-code to display the the emoticons. Any occurrence of the emoticons registered within All
are replaced and returned by this function.
Using the code
To use the code, simply call the Format
function like this:
string text = Emoticon.Format( "Some text with a smiley :-) emoticon." );
History
- 2003-06-29: Article created