I have a couple of properties in my view model that are display-only but I need to retrieve their values using jQuery to perform a calculation on the page. The standard Html.DisplayFor() method just writes their value to the page. I want to create a razor template that will allow me to rend开发者_StackOverflow中文版er each element as:
<span id="ElementsId">Element's value</span>
I know I can specify a template in Html.DisplayFor() to use a particular template for rendering the property but within that template how do I identify the id attribute to write into the span tag?
@Html.DisplayFor(model => model.Element, "MyTemplate");
OK, I found it and it's actually very simple. In my Views\Shared\DisplayTemplates folder I have Reading.cshtml containing the following:
@model System.Int32
<span id="@ViewData.ModelMetadata.PropertyName">@Model</span>
This renders the correct tag using the name of the property as the id attribute and the value of the property as the contents:
<span id="Reading">1234</span>
In the view file this can be called using the following:
@Html.DisplayFor(model => model.Reading, "Reading")
Or if the model property is decorated with UIHint("Reading") then the template name can be left out of the call to DisplayFor() and it will still render using the template:
@Html.DisplayFor(model => model.Reading)
This should work equally well with custom editor templates.
I read many SO posts about defining template for @Html.DisplayFor
for Boolean property but I couldn't clearly understand them. Your question is closed to this and after grasping it, I decided to add a new answer including all steps needed for implementing that. It might be helpful for other people.
1. Creating a template
At first, you need to add a Partial View
in path below (the path is very important):
Views/Shared/DisplayTemplates/
For example, I created a Partial View
that named _ElementTemplate
and Fill it like this:
<span>
@(@Model ? "Yes" : "No")
</span>
2. Adding UIHint to the Model
To make a connection between your property
and template
, you should add UIHint
attribute like below in your model class:
[UIHint("_YesOrNoTemplate")]
public bool MyProperty { get; set; }
3. Using @Html.DisplayNameFor in View
In every view that you need this property, you can use code below:
<div>
@Html.DisplayFor(modelItem => item.MyProperty)
</div>
Output
The code above is rendered to code below in my example (if (MyProperty == true)
):
<div>
<span>
Yes
</span>
</div>
Setting attributes
For setting id
or other html attributes you can use ModelMetadata like this:
<span id="@ViewData.ModelMetadata.PropertyName">
@(@Model ? "Yes" : "No")
</span>
Output with attribute
<div id="MyProperty">
<span>
Yes
</span>
</div>
You could make this id
part of the view model and use it in the display template:
<span id="@Model.Id">@Html.DisplayFor(x => x.Value)</span>
There's an article explaining the Templates
(Display + Editor) in Razor, and also the UIHint
attribute.
I had exactly the same issue as the original post.
Not sure the last comment is valid. It would make the HTML id attribute a run-time value and therefore cannot be referenced with a design time name.
I used the overload of DisplayFor which allows you to add new objects onto the data dictionary (ViewBag)
My model is a C# object called Project with various properties. In my view I have this:
@Html.DisplayFor(model => model.ProjectName, "StringDisplaySetHtmlID", new { HtmlID = "project-name" })
This is using a custom template called StringDisplaySetHtmlID and the last parameter adds a key value pair to the Viewbag.
My template file looks like this:
@model string
<span class = "display-field" id = "@(ViewBag.HtmlID)">@Model</span>
I'm also setting a class here for styling purposes. I've used the key name HtmlID rather than just ID to avoid a potential common naming collision.
Now in my javascript I can pick up the span's content using the following jquery:
var projectName = $('#project-name').text()
The best way to build a display template that will output the following:
<span id="ElementsId">Element's value</span>
Would be this:
<span id="@Html.IdForModel()">@Html.DisplayTextFor(m => m)</span>
These helpers may not have existed when this question was first posted, but this builds on David's answer in two ways:
- Using
@Html.DisplayTextFor(m => m)
instead of@Model
will still utilize data annotations while rendering the value instead of just essentially runningToString()
on it. - Using
@Html.IdForModel()
instead of@ViewData.ModelMetadata.PropertyName
would be preferable in cases where the model is nested or repeated, and the ID is not going to simply be the property name.
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