9

In the view strongly typed view against @model System.Tuple<Person, List<Survey>>

I use inside a for-each loop:

  @Html.EditorFor(x => survey.Questions)

to render questions in a `Survey. It works flawless.

Now I would also like to pass additional data to the custom Editor Template. I did:

@Html.EditorFor(x => survey.Questions, new { htmlAttributes = new { PersonId = 1000 } })

and then in the Edtior Template I want to refer to this PersonId and display it.

This is Editor Template I made(shortcut for question purposes):

  @using WebApplication2.Models
    @model   Question
    <div>
        @ViewData["PersonId"]
    </div>

but nothing shows up.

How to properly pass PersonId = 1000 to this EditorTemplate.

Yoda
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3 Answers3

20

After some searching around found the following stack-overflow answer for iterating through nested properties. I was unable to get the cast to "dynamic" working, but using reflection correctly retrieved the nested anonymous object. https://stackoverflow.com/a/13981462/1046155

However, if you're determined to use HTML attributes only, you can specify them in a dynamic object:

@Html.EditorFor(x => survey.Questions, new { PersonId = 1000, PersonName = "John", PersonAge=10, etc... })

And access them within the editor using @ViewData:

<div>
     @ViewData["PersonId"]
     @ViewData["PersonName"]
     @ViewData["PersonAge"]
     etc...
</div>
2

Try:

@ViewData["htmlAttributes"]["PersonId"]

The outer anonymous object is what populates ViewData. Though, if you use the above, you need to take care that you check that ViewData["htmlAttributes"] actually exists before trying to reference "PersonId" off of it.

Chris Pratt
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  • I pasted it and I get syntax error: `Error 1 Cannot apply indexing with [] to an expression of type 'object'` – Yoda Sep 02 '14 at 20:30
  • Ok so I made investigation and lot of people have problem with it. It turns out it has to be added to view data by this method `@Html.ViewData.Add("PersonId", here I need to instantiate object)` before `EditorFor`. The problem is I have no idead how to pass ANY second parameter there. I would like just to pass int `10` for example. – Yoda Sep 02 '14 at 20:46
  • Ok I did `@{Html.ViewData.Add("PersonId", 100);}` there were syntax problems before but I don't know how to display it in the other view. – Yoda Sep 02 '14 at 20:52
  • To use this method you must pass ViewData as follows: @Html.EditorFor(x => survey.Questions, new { htmlAttributes = new { PersonId = 1000, PersonName = "John", PersonAge=10, etc... }}), and in the view check that ViewData["htmlAttributes"] exists – AntonK Mar 22 '17 at 01:27
2

Seems that you haven't set the ViewData. You need to set the ViewData in the controller that returns this View. Just ViewData["PersonId"] = 10

Mariusz Jamro
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adelb
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