I want to add optional parameters in my routing table. For example I would like the users to browse a product catalog like this: http://www.domain.com/browse/by-category/electronics/1,2,3 etc
Now i've created a route like this:
routes.MapPageRoute(
"ProductsBrowse",
"browse/{BrowseBy}/{Category}",
"~/Pages/Products/Browse.aspx"
);
Pr开发者_如何转开发oblem however is that when a user enters http://www.domain.com/browse , I would like them to present a different page where they can pick the manner on how to browse. So the parameters {BrowseBy} and {Category} will not be used.
Is there a way around this then to create seperate routes for each of the scenarios?
Thank you for your time! Kind regards, Mark
I just came across this question, and knew there had to be way to do this. There is-
MapPageRoute
has an overload that will allow you to specify defaults. here's an example usage based on your code:
routes.MapPageRoute(
"ProductsBrowse",
"browse/{BrowseBy}/{Category}",
"~/Pages/Products/Browse.aspx",
false,
new RouteValueDictionary { { "Category", string.Empty } }
);
So if the user doesn't specify a category this route will still be hit. The problem I have with using two separate routes is that I have links setup around my site that are generated by route name, and you cannot have two routes that have the same name.
Here's good documentation from MSDN: here
try this:
routes.MapPageRoute(
"ProductsBrowse",
"browse/{BrowseBy}/{Category}/{*queryvalues}",
"~/Pages/Products/Browse.aspx"
);
I'd just create the separate route.
That said, you could define a custom RouteHandler that based on some convention you define, automatically send those special cases as if you had a different route.
Alternatively you could use the custom RouteHandler along with a convention, to avoid having to specify the specific page in your routes. That's the equivalent of what asp.net MVC does.
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