top button
Flag Notify
    Connect to us
      Site Registration

Site Registration

View in ASP.NET MVC:

0 votes
423 views

In this section, you will learn about the View in ASP.NET MVC framework.

View is a user interface. View displays data from the model to the user and also enables them to modify the data.

ASP.NET MVC views are stored in Views folder. Different action methods of a single controller class can render different views, so the Views folder contains a separate folder for each controller with the same name as controller, in order to accommodate multiple views. For example, views, which will be rendered from any of the action methods of HomeController, resides in Views > Home folder. In the same way, views which will be rendered from StudentController, will resides in Views > Student folder as shown below.

View folders for Controllers

View folders for Controllers

Note :Shared folder contains views, layouts or partial views which will be shared among multiple views.

Razor view engine:

Microsoft introduced the Razor view engine and packaged with MVC 3. You can write a mix of html tags and server side code in razor view. Razor uses @ character for server side code instead of traditional <% %>. You can use C# or Visual Basic syntax to write server side code inside razor view. Razor view engine maximize the speed of writing code by minimizing the number of characters and keystrokes required when writing a view. Razor views files have .cshtml or vbhtml extension.

ASP.NET MVC supports following types of view files:

View file extension Description
.cshtml C# Razor view. Supports C# with html tags.
.vbhtml Visual Basic Razor view. Supports Visual Basic with html tags.
.aspx ASP.Net web form
.ascx ASP.NET web control

Learn Razor syntax in the next section. Let's see how to create a new view using Visual Studio 2013 for Web with MVC 5.

Create New View:

We have already created StudentController and Student model in the previous section. Now, let's create a Student view and understand how to use model into view.

We will create a view, which will be rendered from Index method of StudentContoller. So, open a StudentController class -> right click inside Index method -> click Add View..

Create View

In the Add View dialogue box, keep the view name as Index. It's good practice to keep the view name the same as the action method name so that you don't have to specify view name explicitly in the action method while returning the view.

Select the scaffolding template. Template dropdown will show default templates available for Create, Delete, Details, Edit, List or Empty view. Select "List" template because we want to show list of students in the view.

View

 

Now, select Student from the Model class dropdrown. Model class dropdown automatically displays the name of all the classes in the Model folder. We have already created Student Model class in the previous section, so it would be included in the dropdown.

View

Check "Use a layout page" checkbox and select _Layout.cshtml page for this view and then click Addbutton. We will see later what is layout page but for now think it like a master page in MVC.

This will create Index view under View -> Student folder as shown below:

View

The following code snippet shows an Index.cshtml created above.

Views\Student\Index.cshtml:

@model IEnumerable<MVC_BasicTutorials.Models.Student>

@{
    ViewBag.Title = "Index";
    Layout = "~/Views/Shared/_Layout.cshtml";
}

<h2>Index</h2>

<p>
    @Html.ActionLink("Create New", "Create")
</p>
<table class="table">
    <tr>
        <th>
            @Html.DisplayNameFor(model => model.StudentName)
        </th>
        <th>
            @Html.DisplayNameFor(model => model.Age)
        </th>
        <th></th>
    </tr>

@foreach (var item in Model) {
    <tr>
        <td>
            @Html.DisplayFor(modelItem => item.StudentName)
        </td>
        <td>
            @Html.DisplayFor(modelItem => item.Age)
        </td>
        <td>
            @Html.ActionLink("Edit", "Edit", new { id=item.StudentId }) |
            @Html.ActionLink("Details", "Details", new { id=item.StudentId  }) |
            @Html.ActionLink("Delete", "Delete", new { id = item.StudentId })
        </td>
    </tr>
}

</table>

As you can see in the above Index view, it contains both Html and razor codes. Inline razor expression starts with @ symbol. @Html is a helper class to generate html controls. You will learn razor syntax and html helpers in the coming sections.

Index.cshtml

The above Index view would look like below.

create view in asp.net mvc

Index View

Note :Every view in the ASP.NET MVC is derived from WebViewPage class included in System.Web.Mvc namespace.

Points to Remember :

  1. View is a User Interface which displays data and handles user interaction.
  2. Views folder contains separate folder for each controller.
  3. ASP.NET MVC supports Razor view engine in addition to traditional .aspx engine.
  4. Razor view files has .cshtml or .vbhtml extension.
posted Jan 27, 2017 by Shivaranjini

  Promote This Article
Facebook Share Button Twitter Share Button LinkedIn Share Button


Related Articles

By default ASP.NET MVC stores all the views associated to a controller inside a sub-folder of Views folder. On the same lines partial views and layout pages are stored inside Shared sub-folder under Views folder. Although this default arrangement works well in most of the cases, at times you may want to deviate from this convention based arrangement and store views, partial views and layouts in some different folder structure. Consider, for example, a huge application that wants to arrange partial views in several sub-folders inside Shared folder. Or some application may want to store views outside views folder. In such cases when you use view names in methods such as View(), Html.Partial() and PartialView() the system won't be able to find the required .cshtml files. Of course, you can use fully qualified paths in some cases but that makes your code rigid because any future change in the paths will require changes at multiple places.

Luckily, you can easily deal with the situation by creating a custom view engine. This article tells you how.

Let's assume that you wish to store partial views and layouts in the following custom folder structure:

image

Notice that partial views and layouts aren't stored directly inside Shared folder. They are stored inside PartialViews and Layouts sub-folders of Shared folder. Views are stored as per default convention. Let's assume that Index view uses Test.cshtml like this:

@Html.Partial("Test")

If you run the application under these settings, you will get this error in the browser:

image

As you can see, the system is unable to find Test.cshtml residing inside PartialViews sub-folder.

To deal with this situation you can create a custom view engine and then supply the custom search locations to the new view engine. Don't worry. Creating a custom view engine to accomplish this task is quite straightforward. Let's do that now.

Add a new class to your project and give it whatever name you wish to give to the new view engine. In my code I am calling my view engine as BinaryIntellectViewEngine. The complete class is shown below:

public class BinaryIntellectViewEngine : RazorViewEngine
{
    public BinaryIntellectViewEngine()
    {
        string[] locations = new string[] {  
            "~/Views/{1}/{0}.cshtml",  
            "~/Views/Shared/PartialViews/{0}.cshtml",  
            "~/Views/Shared/Layouts/{0}.cshtml"
        };

        this.ViewLocationFormats = locations;
        this.PartialViewLocationFormats = locations;
        this.MasterLocationFormats = locations;
    }
}

The BinaryIntellectViewEngine class inherits from RazorViewEngine base class. In our example we are using Razor view engine and hence the above code inherits from RazorViewEngine class. This inbuilt class comes from System.Web.Mvc namespace.

The magic that makes the custom locations work happens inside the constructor of the custom view engine class. Here, we create an array of strings. This array contains a list of all locations where the view engine should look for the views, partial views and layout pages. Notice the convention used in the paths. The placeholder {0} contains the view or payout page name whereas {1} contains the folder name (controller name).

The three base class properties namely ViewLocationFormats, PartialViewLocationFormats and MasterLocationFormats point to the list of search locations for views, partial views and layout pages respectively. In our example, all the three properties are set to the location string array.

This completes our custom view engine. The final step is to register this new view engine with the MVC framework. This is done inside Application_Start event in Global.asax.

void Application_Start(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
    AreaRegistration.RegisterAllAreas();
    GlobalConfiguration.Configure(WebApiConfig.Register);
    RouteConfig.RegisterRoutes(RouteTable.Routes);

    ViewEngines.Engines.Clear();
    ViewEngines.Engines.Add(new BinaryIntellectViewEngine());
}

The Application_Start event handler clears the existing registered view engines by calling Clear() method of ViewEngines.Engines collection. Then the new view engine is added using Add() method.

That's it! If you run the application now you should see the Test partial view rendered successfully.

image

READ MORE

Developers new to ASP.NET MVC often ask these questions:

  • How do I pass multiple models to a view?
  • How do I pass anonymous objects to a view?

This article provides a solution to both of these questions. Before we discuss the solution, let's quickly understand these questions and possible solutions in brief.

How do I pass multiple models to a view?

Consider a case where you have two model classes - Customer and Order. ASP.NET MVC allows you to pass only ONE model to a view. You typically do that by passing the model as a View() method parameter. This means a view can be bound with one and only one model. So, in the preceding example a view can either display Customer data or Order data. What if a view requires to display both? You can tackle such a situation as follows:

  • Create a new view model class, say CustomerOrder, that has two properties. One for holding Customer data and other for holding Order data. 
    public class CustomerOrder
    {
      public List<Customer> Customers{get; set;}
      public List<Order> Orders{get; set;}
    }
  • Pass one of the model as the View() method parameter and other(s) through ViewData or ViewBag.
  • Use ExpandoObject to create a dynamic model.

The first two approaches are quite straightforward and hence I won't discuss them here. Out of these three the first solution (custom view model class) is a recommended approach to deal with the situation. However, it calls for creating of a new view model class (POCO). The second one does the job but the view can't be strongly typed because models passed through ViewData or ViewBag are not part of the Model property of the view. The third approach is the topic of this article and is discussed in detail in the later part of this article.

 How do I pass anonymous objects to a view?

Sometimes you need to write LINQ to Entities queries that return data filled in an anonymous type. Consider the following example:

var query = from c in db.Customers
            join o in db.Orders
            on c.CustomerID equals o.CustomerID
            orderby c.CustomerID ascending
            select new { 
                c.CustomerID,
                c.CompanyName,
                o.OrderID,
                o.OrderDate 
            };

Here, you are not selecting Customer objects (select c). You are creating an anonymous type that has four properties - CustomerID, CompanyName, OrderID and OrderDate. Although this LINQ query works without any problem, the problem is you can't pass anonymous types to an ASP.NET MVC view. If you try to do so, you will see a runtime error. Of course, just like previous case you can create a new view model (POCO with these four properties) and project your data in it. You can then pass the collection to the View() method. As before this is a recommended solution but again you need create an additional class. If you wish to avoid doing that for some reason, here also you can resort to ExpandoObject. You can store the realized data in an ExpandoObject and then pass it to the view.

ExpandoObject to the rescue

The ExpandoObject class resides in System.Dynamic namespace and represents an object whose members can be dynamically added and removed at run time. In our specific cases an ExpandoObject can act as a container for multiple pieces of data that you wish to pass as a model to a view. So, in a way ExpandoObject is a "dynamic" alternative to a manually created view model.

Storing data in an ExpandoObject is straightforward.

dynamic model = new ExpandoObject();
model.Customers = <some_data_here>;
model.Orders = <some_data_here>;

The above code creates an instance of ExpandoObject class. Notice that the instance is stored in a variable of type dynamic. The code then assigns Customers and Orders properties of the ExpandoObject to some data. You should be familiar with this usage because ViewBag uses the same "dynamic" mechanism to store values.

Ok. Now that you know what an ExpandoObject is and how to use it, let's put it to use in our specific situations.

Let's assume that you have two model classes - Customers and Orders - as a part of Entity Framework data model. You wish to pass both of them to a view. So, you can write something like this in an action method:

public ActionResult Index()
{
    NorthwindEntities db=new NorthwindEntities();

    dynamic model = new ExpandoObject();
    model.Customers = db.Customers.ToList();
    model.Orders = db.Orders.ToList();
    return View(model);
}

Notice the code marked in bold letters. The code creates an ExpandoObject and assigns two properties on it - Customers and Orders. These properties store a generic List of the respective model objects. The ExpandoObject is then passed to the View() method.

You can use  the ExpandoObject in the view as shown below:

@model dynamic

...
<h1>List of Customers</h1>
<div>
  @foreach(var item in Model.Customers)
  {
    <h2>@item.CustomerID</h2>
  }
</div>

Notice that the view is marked to use a dynamic model using the @model dynamic line. This line is optional. If you don't write any @model then Razor defaults to dynamic. The foreach loop then iterates through Model.Customers property and displays all the CustomerIDs. Note that since Model points to an ExpandoObject, you won't get any IntelliSense help for the property names. You will need to key them in yourself. On the same lines you can display Model.Orders data.

Store anonymous objects in an ExpandoObject

In the preceding example you stored List of Customer and Order objects respectively in the model ExpandoObject. Now let's see how to store an anonymous object in an ExpandoObject.

var addtionalInfo = new { 
                    CustomersNote="This is a customer note",
                    OrdersNote="This is an order note" };
IDictionary<string, object> 
expandoAddInfo = new ExpandoObject();
foreach (PropertyDescriptor property 
         in 
         TypeDescriptor.GetProperties(addtionalInfo.GetType()))
{
    expandoAddInfo.Add(property.Name, 
           property.GetValue(addtionalInfo));
}
model.AdditionalInfo = expandoAddInfo;

The code creates an anonymous object with two properties - CustomersNote and OrdersNote - and stores it in additionalInfo variable. Then an ExpandoObject is created. This time, however, it is captured as an IDictionary<string, object>. Then a foreach loop iterates through all the properties of additionalInfo object. This is done using PropertyDescriptor and TypeDescriptor classes from System.ComponentModel namespace. These classes allow you to reflect upon the properties of any object (additionalInfo in this case). All the properties from the anonymous object are transferred to the ExpandoObject by adding them to the expandoAddInfo variable. Finally, AdditionalInfo property of model (which itself is an ExpandoObject) is set to expandoAddInfo ExpandoObject.

You can pass the model object to the view exactly as before. Once received in the view you can access the AdditionalInfo property as shown below:

<h1>Additional Information</h1>
<h2>@Model.AdditionalInfo.CustomersNote</h2>
<h2>@Model.AdditionalInfo.OrdersNote</h2>

What if you wish to convert a collection of anonymous objects to an ExpandoObject? The following code shows how this can be done:

var query = from c in db.Customers
            join o in db.Orders
            on c.CustomerID equals o.CustomerID
            orderby c.CustomerID ascending
            select new { 
                c.CustomerID,
                c.CompanyName,
                o.OrderID,
                o.OrderDate 
            };

List<ExpandoObject> joinData=new List<ExpandoObject>();

foreach(var item in query)
{
    IDictionary<string, object> itemExpando = new ExpandoObject();
    foreach (PropertyDescriptor property 
             in 
             TypeDescriptor.GetProperties(item.GetType()))
    {
        itemExpando.Add(property.Name, property.GetValue(item));
    }
    joinData.Add(itemExpando as ExpandoObject);
}

model.JoinData = joinData;

The above code is similar to the previous case but deals with a List of ExpandoObject (joinData variable). Each ExpandoObject (itemExpando variable) holds data belonging to a single anonymous object. The joinData List is then assigned to the JoinData property of the model ExpandoObject.

You can access JoinData inside a view as shown below:

<h1>Customer Orders Join Data</h1>
<div>
    @foreach (var item in Model.JoinData)
    {
        <h2>@item.CustomerID (@item.OrderID on @item.OrderDate)</h2>
    }
</div>

A note of caution about using ExpandoObject as shown above - Although ExpandoObject solves our problem, one should carefully evaluate whether there is any flaw in the model creation process. You should give a thought to creating POCOs for holding the multiple pieces instead of using an ExpandoObject. Since ExpandoObject instances are dynamic Visual Studio IntelliSense won't help much. POCO containers, on the other hand, give all the benefits of strongly typed view.

That's it for today! Keep coding!!

READ MORE

A common way to perform list, insert, update and delete operations in ASP.NET MVC is to create four separate views. The List view forms the launching view where records are displayed and you can choose to Edit, Delete or Insert a record. However, in some cases you may want to perform all these operations in a single view itself. This task can be accomplished using full page postback or using Ajax. This article discusses the former technique.

Consider the following figure that shows one such arrangement:

image

The above figure shows a list of records from Customers table of Northwind database. You can Insert a new customer by clicking on Insert button. You can select a row for editing by clicking on the Select button. The selected customer is shown below the main table for editing. Similarly you can also delete a customer by clicking on the Delete button.

Model and View Model

Let's see how the above application can be built. Begin by creating a new empty ASP.NET MVCproject in Visual Studio. Then add an ADO.NET Entity Data Model for the Customers table. The Customer entity class is shown below:

image

Then add a new POCO to the Models folder and name it CustomersViewModel. As you will see later, this view model class will be passed from the HomeController to the Index view. The CustomersViewModel class is shown below:

public class CustomersViewModel
{
    public List<Customer> Customers { get; set; }
    public Customer SelectedCustomer { get; set; }
    public string DisplayMode { get; set; }
}

The CustomersViewModel class consists of three properties. The Customers property holds a List of Customer that are to be displayed on the view. The SelectedCustomer property points to a Customer that is selected by the user. If no Customer is selected this property is null. The DisplayMode property indicates the mode of the Customer details area. Possible values are ReadOnly (after selection), ReadWrite (during edit) and WriteOnly (during insert). For the sake of simplicity DisplayMode is created as a string property, you can easily make it to accept an enumeration.

Home controller and its action methods

Then add HomeController in the Controllers folder. The HomeController will contain the following action methods:

  • Index()
  • Select()
  • New()
  • Insert()
  • Edit()
  • Update()
  • Delete()
  • Cancel()

The method names are self-explanatory. All the actions except Index() are called as a result of POST operation. Let's discuss them briefly one by one.

public ActionResult Index()
{
    using (NorthwindEntities db = new NorthwindEntities())
    {
        CustomersViewModel model = new CustomersViewModel();
        model.Customers = db.Customers.OrderBy(
                m => m.CustomerID).Take(5).ToList(); 
        model.SelectedCustomer = null;
        return View(model);
    }
}

The Index() action fetches a list of customers and fills it in the Customers view model property. The SelectedCustomer is set to null because there is no selected customer in the beginning. Note that for the sake of simplicity the above code fetches only 5 customers. You can, of course, fetch all if you so wish.

[HttpPost]
public ActionResult New()
{
    using (NorthwindEntities db = new NorthwindEntities())
    {
        CustomersViewModel model = new CustomersViewModel();
        model.Customers = db.Customers.OrderBy(
                       m => m.CustomerID).Take(5).ToList();
        model.SelectedCustomer = null;
        model.DisplayMode = "WriteOnly";
        return View("Index", model);
    }
}

The New() action is called when a user hits the Insert button at the top of the page. It fills the Customers list as before. SelectedCustomer is set to null because a new record is to be added. The DisplayMode is set to WriteOnly because we will be accepting new customer details. The following figure shows how the insert area looks like:

image

[HttpPost]
public ActionResult Insert(Customer obj)
{
    using (NorthwindEntities db = new NorthwindEntities())
    {
        db.Customers.Add(obj);
        db.SaveChanges();

        CustomersViewModel model = new CustomersViewModel();
        model.Customers = db.Customers.OrderBy(
                         m => m.CustomerID).Take(5).ToList();
        model.SelectedCustomer = db.Customers.Find(obj.CustomerID);
        model.DisplayMode = "ReadOnly";
        return View("Index", model);
    }
}

The Insert() action is called when a user fills new customer details and clicks on the Save button (see above figure). It receives a Customer object as its parameter. Inside, the Insert() action adds that new Customer to the database. It also sets the currently selected customer to the newly added customer by setting the SelectedCustomer property. The DisplayMode is set to ReadOnly so that the record is displayed in read-only manner.

[HttpPost]
public ActionResult Select(string id)
{
    using (NorthwindEntities db = new NorthwindEntities())
    {
        CustomersViewModel model = new CustomersViewModel();
        model.Customers = db.Customers.OrderBy(
                    m => m.CustomerID).Take(5).ToList();
        model.SelectedCustomer = db.Customers.Find(id);
        model.DisplayMode = "ReadOnly";
        return View("Index",model);
    }
}

The Select() action method is called when the Select button from a customer table row is clicked. It receives CustomerID as its parameter. Inside, it fills Customers list as before. This time SelectedCustomer property is set to the Customer whose CustomerID is passed. The DisplayMode property is set to ReadOnly to indicate that the details of the selected customer should be displayed in a read-only table below the main customer listing (see below).

image

[HttpPost]
public ActionResult Edit(string id)
{
    using (NorthwindEntities db = new NorthwindEntities())
    {
        CustomersViewModel model = new CustomersViewModel();
        model.Customers = db.Customers.OrderBy(
                        m => m.CustomerID).Take(5).ToList();
        model.SelectedCustomer = db.Customers.Find(id);
        model.DisplayMode = "ReadWrite";
        return View("Index", model);
    }
}

The Edit() action is called when a user clicks on the Edit button once a Customer is selected. Inside, it sets the SelectedCustomer property to the Customer whose CustomerID is passed to the method. DisplayMode property is set to ReadOnly to display that record in editable table as shown below:

image

[HttpPost]
public ActionResult Update(Customer obj)
{
    using (NorthwindEntities db = new NorthwindEntities())
    {
        Customer existing = db.Customers.Find(obj.CustomerID);
        existing.CompanyName = obj.CompanyName;
        existing.ContactName = obj.ContactName;
        existing.Country = obj.Country;
        db.SaveChanges();
                
        CustomersViewModel model = new CustomersViewModel();
        model.Customers = db.Customers.OrderBy(
                      m => m.CustomerID).Take(5).ToList();

        model.SelectedCustomer = existing;
        model.DisplayMode = "ReadOnly";
        return View("Index", model);
    }
}

The Update() action is called when a user modifies an existing Customer data and clicks on the Save button (see above figure). Inside, the code updates an existing Customer and saves the changes back to the database. Then Customers, SelectedCustomer and DisplayMode properties of the view model are set.

[HttpPost]
public ActionResult Delete(string id)
{
    using (NorthwindEntities db = new NorthwindEntities())
    {
        Customer existing = db.Customers.Find(id);
        db.Customers.Remove(existing);
        db.SaveChanges();

        CustomersViewModel model = new CustomersViewModel();
        model.Customers = db.Customers.OrderBy(
                          m => m.CustomerID).Take(5).ToList();

        model.SelectedCustomer = null;
        model.DisplayMode = "";
        return View("Index", model);
    }
}

The Delete() action is called when Delete button in any of the customer row is clicked. It receives CustomerID as its parameter. Inside, it removes the specified Customer and saves the changes back to the database. The SelectedCustomer is set to null because post deletion that customer no longer exists in the database. For the same reason, DisplayMode is set to an empty string.

[HttpPost]
public ActionResult Cancel(string id)
{
    using (NorthwindEntities db = new NorthwindEntities())
    {
        CustomersViewModel model = new CustomersViewModel();
        model.Customers = db.Customers.OrderBy(
                          m => m.CustomerID).Take(5).ToList();
        model.SelectedCustomer = db.Customers.Find(id);
        model.DisplayMode = "ReadOnly";
        return View("Index", model);
    }
}

The Cancel() action is called when Cancel button from the Edit area is clicked. It receives CustomerID as its parameter. It changes the DisplayMode from ReadWrite to ReadOnly so that the SelectedCustomer is displayed in read-only fashion.

Notice that all the above action methods return Index view and CustomerViewModel object.

Index view

Now, let's see what goes inside the Index view.

@model MasterDetailsDemo.Models.CustomersViewModel

@{
    Layout = null;
}

<!DOCTYPE html>

<html>
<head>
    <meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width" />
    <title>Index</title>
    <style>
        .SelectedCustomer
        {
            background-color:gray;
            font-weight:bold;
        }
    </style>
</head>
<body>
    <h1>List of Customers</h1>

    <form method="post">
        <input type="submit" 
         value="Insert" formaction="/home/new" />
        <br /><br />
        <table border="1" cellpadding="10">
            <tr>
                <th>CustomerID</th>
                <th>CompanyName</th>
                <th colspan="2">Actions</th>
            </tr>
            @foreach (var item in Model.Customers)
            {
                if (Model.SelectedCustomer != null)
                {
                    if (item.CustomerID == 
                        Model.SelectedCustomer.CustomerID)
                    {
                        @:<tr class="SelectedCustomer">
                    }
                    else
                    {
                        @:<tr>
                    }
                }
                else
                {
                    @:<tr>
                }
                <td>@item.CustomerID</td>
                <td>@item.CompanyName</td>
                <td><input type="submit" 
                     formaction="/home/select/@item.CustomerID" 
                     value="Select" /></td>
                <td><input type="submit" 
                     formaction="/home/delete/@item.CustomerID" 
                     value="Delete" /></td>
                @:</tr>
            }
        </table>
    </form>
    <br /><br />
    @{
        if(Model.SelectedCustomer!=null)
        {
            if (Model.DisplayMode == "ReadOnly")
            {
                Html.RenderPartial
                ("ShowCustomer",Model.SelectedCustomer);
            }
            if (Model.DisplayMode == "ReadWrite")
            {
                Html.RenderPartial
                ("EditCustomer",Model.SelectedCustomer);
            }
        }
        if (Model.DisplayMode == "WriteOnly")
        {
            Html.RenderPartial("InsertCustomer",
            new MasterDetailsDemo.Models.Customer());
        }
    }
</body>
</html>

The Index view is divided into two logical parts. The top part displays a list of customers in a table. Notice that a CSS class SelectedCustomer is applied to the row that contains the selected CustomerID. The bottom part displays a Partial Page based on the value of DisplayMode. This way either show, insert or edit areas are displayed. Notice that there are three partial pages involved:

  • ShowCustomer.cshtml
  • EditCustomer.cshtml
  • InsertCustomer.cshtml

These three partial pages render the read-only, read-write and write-only displays respectively. All of them take Customer object as their model. Let's see each of these partial pages one by one.

ShowCustomer partial page

The following code shows ShowCustomer.cshtml partial page.

@model MasterDetailsDemo.Models.Customer

@using(Html.BeginForm("Edit","Home",FormMethod.Post))
{ 
<table border="1" cellpadding="10">
    <tr>
        <td>Customer ID :</td>
        <td>@Model.CustomerID</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
        <td>Company Name :</td>
        <td>@Model.CompanyName</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
        <td>Contact Name :</td>
        <td>@Model.ContactName</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
        <td>Country :</td>
        <td>@Model.Country</td>
    </tr>
    <tr>
        <td colspan="2">
            <input type="submit" value="Edit" 
                   formaction="/home/edit/@Model.CustomerID" />
            <input type="submit" value="Cancel" 
                   formaction="/home/index" />
        </td>
    </tr>
</table>
}

Notice that the Edit and Cancel buttons submit to /home/edit and /home/index respectively. The other markup from the partial page is quite straightforward and displays CustomerID, CompanyName, ContactName and Country columns for a selected customer.

EditCustomer partial page

The following code shows what goes inside EditCustomer.cshtml:

@model MasterDetailsDemo.Models.Customer

@using (Html.BeginForm("Update", "Home", FormMethod.Post))
{
    <table border="1" cellpadding="10">
        <tr>
            <td>Customer ID :</td>
            <td>@Html.TextBoxFor(m => m.CustomerID, 
                         new { @readonly = "readonly" })</td>
        </tr>
        <tr>
            <td>Company Name :</td>
            <td>@Html.TextBoxFor(m => m.CompanyName)</td>
        </tr>
        <tr>
            <td>Contact Name :</td>
            <td>@Html.TextBoxFor(m => m.ContactName)</td>
        </tr>
        <tr>
            <td>Country :</td>
            <td>@Html.TextBoxFor(m => m.Country)</td>
        </tr>
        <tr>
            <td colspan="2">
                <input type="submit" value="Save" 
                       formaction="/home/update" />
                <input type="submit" value="Cancel" 
                       formaction="/home/cancel/@Model.CustomerID" />
            </td>
        </tr>
    </table>
}

Note that Save button and Cancel button submit to /home/update and /home/cancel respectively.

InsertCustomer partial page

Finally, here is the markup of InsertCustomer.cshtml:

@model MasterDetailsDemo.Models.Customer

@using (Html.BeginForm("Insert", "Home", FormMethod.Post))
{
    <table border="1" cellpadding="10">
        <tr>
            <td>Customer ID :</td>
            <td>@Html.TextBoxFor(m => m.CustomerID)</td>
        </tr>
        <tr>
            <td>Company Name :</td>
            <td>@Html.TextBoxFor(m => m.CompanyName)</td>
        </tr>
        <tr>
            <td>Contact Name :</td>
            <td>@Html.TextBoxFor(m => m.ContactName)</td>
        </tr>
        <tr>
            <td>Country :</td>
            <td>@Html.TextBoxFor(m => m.Country)</td>
        </tr>
        <tr>
            <td colspan="2">
                <input type="submit" value="Save" 
                       formaction="/home/insert" />
                <input type="submit" value="Cancel" 
                       formaction="/home/index" />
            </td>
        </tr>
    </table>
}

The Save and Cancel button submit to /home/insert and /home/index respectively.

That's it! All the parts of the application are in place. Run the application and test whether all the operations work as expected.

READ MORE
...