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Home/ Questions/Q 7825389
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 2, 20262026-06-02T08:57:21+00:00 2026-06-02T08:57:21+00:00

I understand that whenever you create a property for a user control, you can

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I understand that whenever you create a property for a user control, you can set the property value through declarative syntax, so you can have something like this:

<uc1:MyControl id="MyControl1" runat="server" Text="Hello" Number="10" Access="ReadWrite" />

These attributes set the value for properties of type:

  • Text is String
  • Number is Integer
  • Access is Enum

I wouldn’t be able to set a public property of type “Array” or “Control” in declarative markup. (or can I?)

My question is:

What is the complete list of Types that can be set directly with declarative syntax as attributes in a control?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-02T08:57:28+00:00Added an answer on June 2, 2026 at 8:57 am

    Ok, after some time with this question without being solved, finally I found the official answer in this article at the MSDN library.

    Turns out that those properties that can be persisted as attributes are called Simple Properties and must be a string or a type that easily maps to a string. Here’s an extract of the article:

    ” A simple property is a property whose type is a string or a type that
    maps easily to a string. A simple property is persisted as an
    attribute on the control’s opening tag without any work on your part.
    Properties of type String and primitive value types in the .NET
    Framework class library such as Boolean, Int16, Int32, and Enum are
    simple properties. “

    So I had the list almost complete in my question. Properties that can be set directly with declarative syntax (as atributes) must be of the following types:

    • String
    • Boolean
    • Int16
    • Int32
    • Enum
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