I mean parameters of methods of controllers. For example, I have a View, which has :1. One radiobutton Yes / No (table inside DB has bit field)2. dropdownlist with int values (table has int too)3. Textbox (Firstname for example)I can create a method:
I am reorganizing my MVC app into a Models project and a Controllers project, and then the main application as a project. So, everything is working good so far except. Whenever I go to "Rebuild" my controllers project, I get this error: Controllers.AccountController.Initialize(System.Web.Routing.RequestContext)': no suitable method found to override.
Keep in mind that AccountController.cs was automatically placed in my application by Visual Studio, and this was all working fine when the Controllers were within my main project. I think it might have to do with the ASPNETDB.MDF file that this AccountController.cs file references to authenticate users as they log in, since this database stayed within my main project and didn't follow the Controllers project.
Here's the Initialize method on my AccountController: protected override void Initialize(RequestContext requestContext) { if (FormsService == null) { FormsService = new FormsAuthenticationService(); } if (MembershipService == null) { MembershipService = new AccountMembershipService(); } base.Initialize(requestContext); }
I have multiple tables that are all linked back to a central table with foreign keys. I want to be able to create a new record in table 2, but I'm having trouble because I don't know how to create a new instance of table 2's record while referencing the ID of the record it will be tied to.
EXAMPLE:
Database: Collection Table: Collection Field 1: id Field 2: name Table: Book Field 1: collectionId Field 2: id Field 3: name
Now, I don't want to be able to create a book without setting it's collectionID, but I can't figure out how this should be divided in the controllers/views.
Should Book have a controller separate from Collection, or should the Collection controller have a createBook method, separate from it's own create method?
I want to call the createBook method (from it's own controller, or the Collection controller) from the Collection Details view.
When I invoke the create method of Book, how do I create a new Book that is instantiated with the collectionId set from the details view of the Collection item that was listed in the details view?
I should point out, I'm using the entity framework for my model, and I'm definitely new to this.
I am trying to implement the SportStar from Steven Sanderson book but I am encountering a problem when I want to create the NavController. The code is below
public NavController(IProductsRepository productsRepository)
From a stored proc, I need to restore a database from a backup (.bak) to a staging database, and then perform read operations on the staging database. The .bak is received from a business partner on a regular basis. The process must be fully automated via the stored proc (the process will be run overnight every 24-48 hrs).
i am creating a total column which multiplies the price by quantity in my gridview but am stuck on converting the input strings.
The price is stored as a decimal in my database and the quantity is a nvarchar.
i am receiving this error:
Input string was not in a correct format.
Description:
An unhandled exception occurred during the execution of the current web request. review the stack trace for more information about the error and where it originated in the code.
Exception Details: System.FormatException: Input string was not in a correct format.
I am doing a workshop , it has questions, and answers with radiobuttons, I need that when a click is made on a radiobutton a message appears saying that it is correct or it is not correct, how can a do it,
I am using 3 tables and are trying to get the correct info belonging to the correct id. Like this: I go to a page and here i want to see the information from the 3 tables using a specific id.
I have written this so far in a query:
[Code]....
My problem is that the last line does not work and i am uncertain how to make this work? How to write it correctly that is.
i'm in a project with a service layer (WCF), a proxy layer that are between this service layer and the "controllers". Every controller should call this proxy layer to get data, and instead return a model to be rendered, returns a bigger entity that i've to convert using Linq to a more little model. Then pass it to the view.
Do you think is a good idea that this conversion be done by the controller? In my opinion the controller is not the responsable to shape the incoming object from the proxy layer. This object should be returned by the proxy layer and the controller should pass it to the view directly.
I want to test that when my form data is posted back to my controllers that the data annotations and the model binding is going to do its job and give the correct model state. After googling for a while I can't find a really good tutorial or article that shows how to do this.
Can anyone point me in the right direction? What is the best practice in this area? I have read that I may need to use moq and MVCContrib but I have not read a tutorial that makes me shout, "Yes, this is the right way to do it!"
I'm starting a new ASP.NET MVC project, and I decided to put my controllers in a different assembly. Evertyhing works fine, but I have hit a problem: I created a new area in my MVC Project, called Administration. I have an AdminController Class in my seperate assembly which is supposed to return views from my Admin area, but everytime it tries to return a view, it looks for it in the wrong place (~/Admin/SomeView.cshtml Instead of ~/Administration/Admin/SomeView.cshtml) How can I tell the controller to look for views in the wanted area?
I am wanting to create a path somewhat like this: /Administration/News and have it forward to a News controller instead of it being the action.How would I go about this?
I was wondering what the major differences are between controllers and webservices. I understand webservices can receive postbacks via ajax while controllers cannot. Also, when you put a webservice in a MVC site, what file structure do you use to store it? Just create a single services folder?
Basically what the title says. I created a new MVC application. I'm trying to add new pages to the site, but anytime I do I get the following error:Server Error in '/' Application.The resource cannot be found.Description: HTTP 404. The resource you are looking for (or one of its dependencies) could have been removed, had its name changed, or is temporarily unavailable. Please review the following URL and make sure that it is spelled correctly.
namespace MyAppMVC.Controllers { public class ProductsController : Controlle{ public ActionResult Index() [code]...
I'm currently migrating a WebForms app over to MVC. One problem I have is that some users will probably have a page like www.mysite.com/login.aspx bookmarked (or maybe some other .aspx page). Currently this will throw an InvalidOperationException stating that the controller 'login.aspx' could not be found. Is there any way I can handle this so that it redirects the user to another page?
I know I can implement Application_Error in the Global.asax file, but I'd rather not redirect on any InvalidOperationException, just when it's an invalid controller.
I would like to have a project that contains all of my Controller logic. I'm not concerned with using Areas, as these are still maintained within the same project. Consider this scenario: I have multiple sites/apps that require the exact same interaction in regards to a particular area, say CRUD ops on a user account. I do not want to create all of the controller logic for one site/app, recreate it again for the next, and make sure that I keep all maintenance to each in sync. I would prefer to keep the controllers in a separate project and reference them from the appropriate site.
I know someone will say that the controller logic is a lot of times specific to the application (as I've read elsewhere), but let's just say that it is guaranteed to be the same. I want to focus on the "how" and not the "why". So far, I've created a class library project with the appropriate references for accessing System.Web.Mvc. How do I proceed with the routing configuration for this? Is this idea even possible? I read a few older articles that were written when Areas were first being introduced that said to create separate projects for them. Is this idea similar to that?
I am developing a restful web api using asp.net mvc and trying to extend the MVCWEBAPI project on codeplex that i took from here - http://code.msdn.microsoft.com/MvcWebAPII have added a folder nested within API folder inside the Controllers folder.This path does not work - (nested folder Security)http://localhost/API/Security/Authentication/LoginAlthoug, this path works - (not nested)http://localhost/API/Media/GetMediaThe folder structure is Controllers ->APIWithin API folder I added a Security folder and then added AuthenticationController under it.To make the routing work, I updated global.asax.csBelow is the required code.
public static void RegisterRoutes(RouteCollection routes) { var map = new NameValueCollection();
Does it make sense to do error handling and logging inside actions methods or handle the OnException method inside the controllers. One way means writing try/catches in all the action methods even when there is nothing to be done to recover from the error. Handling this at the controller level would allow logging and redirection to an error handler page without writing try/catches inside all the action methods.
Which method makes the most sense? Here is example code of try/catches in an action method.
[HttpPost] public ActionResult Delete(int id) {[code]...
For applications that need to have fastly different view layers, and I would like to still use the idea of the controller. I would ideally like to but the controllers in a Class Lib. and then have only the Views in a MVC Web Application. Taking the model out in this way works well, but I can't find a nice way to split the views and controllers.
I'm using the release 1 candidate from a few weeks ago and am loading my controllers from the spring.net context. I notice that my factory which couldn't be simpler keeps being called for a controller called "css". I'm using the Razor template engine. Does mvc or razor create any behind the scenes controllers that I don't know about?