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Themeing and Master Pages

开发者 https://www.devze.com 2022-12-23 01:11 出处:网络
I have the requirement to support themeing of my site\'s pages.The way I am doing this is by dynamically choosing a master page based on the current theme.

I have the requirement to support themeing of my site's pages. The way I am doing this is by dynamically choosing a master page based on the current theme.

I have setup a directory structure like so

/shared/masterpages/theme1/Master1.master /shared/masterpages/theme1/Master2.master /shared/masterpages/theme1/Master3.master

/shared/masterpages/theme2/Master1.master /shared/masterpages/theme2/Master2.master /shared/masterpages/theme2/Master3.master

And I am still using the page directive in the view

<%@ Page Title="" Language="C#" MasterPageFile="~/Views/shared/masterpages/theme1/Master1.Master"%>

I would still like to leverage the view's MasterPageFile property and just change the theme directory.

I can only think of three ways to do this none of them which sound great.

  1. Create a custom BaseView class that uses OnPreInit to change the theme like this
  2. Create some xml file or database table that links each view to a master page file and then set this in the controller.
  3. Build some tool that reads all the views and parses them for their masterpagefile, (similar to 2 but could be done at run time potentially.)

Option 1 seems the best option to me so far. Does anyone else have any开发者_运维知识库 thoughts on how to do this?


Updated suggestion:

Since my original suggestion didn't work out as I had expected, here's a possible way to work around it, while still keeping your action methods clean, and minimizing repetition of code:

  1. Create an ActionResult that adds the master name/theme name/whatever info you need to pick the correct master page into ViewData["masterInfo"] (or something similar).
  2. Create a base class which themeable views inherit. Your base class should, of course, inherit from System.Web.Mvc.ViewPage. If you need, also create a generic version that inherits from .ViewPage<T>.
  3. In your base class, create a construction method that selects the correct master page based on ViewData["masterInfo"]. I'm not sure if there's a need or not, but don't forget to run the base constructor, either before or after your code, if there is one that needs to run.
  4. Decorate all relevant actions with the attribute, and set their views to inherit your base class instead of System.Web.Mvc.ViewPage.

Original post:
Why not have an ActionFilter, that can be applied on controller level, that sets the MasterPageFile property of the view? If you override OnActionExecuted, it shouldn't be too tricky to test if the result was a ViewResult and in that case change the property to the correct value.

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