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Asked: May 10, 20262026-05-10T14:18:07+00:00 2026-05-10T14:18:07+00:00

This is actually a two part question. First,does the HttpContext.Current correspond to the current

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This is actually a two part question. First,does the HttpContext.Current correspond to the current System.UI.Page object?

And the second question, which is probably related to the first, is why can’t I use the following to see if the current page implements an interface:

private IWebBase FindWebBase() {     if (HttpContext.Current as IWebBase != null)     {         return (IWebBase)HttpContext.Current.;     }     throw new NotImplementedException('Crawling for IWebBase not implemented yet'); } 

The general context is that some controls need to know whether they are executing as a SharePoint webpart, or as part of an Asp.Net framework.

I have solved the problem by requiring the control to pass a reference to itself, and checking the Page property of the control, but I’m still curious why the above does not work.

The compiler error is: Cannot convert System.Web.HttpContext to …IWebBase via a reference conversion, boxing conversion, unboxing conversion, wrapping conversion or null type conversion.

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  1. 2026-05-10T14:18:08+00:00Added an answer on May 10, 2026 at 2:18 pm

    No, from MSDN on HttpContext.Current: ‘Gets or sets the HttpContext object for the current HTTP request.’

    In other words it is an HttpContext object, not a Page.

    You can get to the Page object via HttpContext using:

    Page page = HttpContext.Current.Handler as Page;  if (page != null) {      // Use page instance. } 
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