I am attempting to create some custom map routes but can't get it working quite right.
My ultimate aim is to be able to specify something like the following. Where by I essentially have my URL constructed with value pairs of "id" and "name". The name is irrelevant and solely for user pleasantries, I will require the ID in my controller though.
/dashboards/5-My-Estate-name/89-My-subgroup-name/133-Maybe-even-another-subgroup
For starters I'm working on the first section and having troubles.
Browsing to "http://localhost:53933/dashboards/109-building-xyz" whilst using the following route generates the error A public action method '109-building-xyz' was not found on controller 'MyInterfaceInterface.Controllers.DashboardsController'.
routes.MapRoute(
"Dashboard",
"dashboards/{id}-{name}", // URL pattern
new { controller = "Dashboards", action = "Index" },
new { id = @"\d+", name = UrlParameter.Optional }
);
Obviously I wanted this to be routed to the Index function with parameters.
What am I doing wrong? Am I even structuring this correctly? I come from a web-PHP background and using htaccess to achieve such things.
Thanks
The order of routes matter. MVC will match the first declared route with a pattern that matches the URL pattern.
So if you have this:
routes.MapRoute(
"Default",
"{controller}/{action}/{id}", // URL pattern
new { controller = "Home", action = "Index" },
new { id = UrlParameter.Optional }
);
routes.MapRoute(
"Dashboard",
"dashboards/{id}-{name}", // URL pattern
new { controller = "Dashboards", action = "Index" },
new { id = @"\d+", name = UrlParameter.Optional }
);
Then what will happen with the URL http://localhost:53933/dashboards/109-building-xyz
is that MVC will match "dashboards" to the controller and "109-building-xyz" to the action.
You need to always declare your most specific routes first, and more general routes afterward, like so:
routes.MapRoute(
"Dashboard",
"dashboards/{id}-{name}", // URL pattern
new { controller = "Dashboards", action = "Index" },
new { id = @"\d+", name = UrlParameter.Optional }
);
routes.MapRoute(
"Default",
"{controller}/{action}/{id}", // URL pattern
new { controller = "Home", action = "Index" },
new { id = UrlParameter.Optional }
);
However, Morten Mertner is right in his comment -- I don't think you can have 2 route parameters that are not separated by a forward slash. You would need to change your URL pattern to something like this in order to use it with the default routing engine:
"dashboards/{id}/{name}"
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