Click here for more information, but esentially there is no need for extension methods. It's already baked in, just not in a very intuitive way.
Url.Action("Action", null, null, Request.Url.Scheme);
Extend the UrlHelper
namespace System.Web.Mvc
{
public static class HtmlExtensions
{
public static string AbsoluteAction(this UrlHelper url, string action, string controller)
{
Uri requestUrl = url.RequestContext.HttpContext.Request.Url;
string absoluteAction = string.Format(
"{0}://{1}{2}",
requestUrl.Scheme,
requestUrl.Authority,
url.Action(action, controller));
return absoluteAction;
}
}
}
Then call it like this
<%= Url.AbsoluteAction("Dashboard", "Account")%>
EDIT - RESHARPER ANNOTATIONS
The most upvoted comment on the accepted answer is This answer is the better one, this way Resharper can still validate that the Action and Controller exists.
So here is an example how you could get the same behaviour.
using JetBrains.Annotations
namespace System.Web.Mvc
{
public static class HtmlExtensions
{
public static string AbsoluteAction(
this UrlHelper url,
[AspMvcAction]
string action,
[AspMvcController]
string controller)
{
Uri requestUrl = url.RequestContext.HttpContext.Request.Url;
string absoluteAction = string.Format(
"{0}://{1}{2}",
requestUrl.Scheme,
requestUrl.Authority,
url.Action(action, controller));
return absoluteAction;
}
}
}
Supporting info:
<%= Url.Action("About", "Home", null, Request.Url.Scheme) %>
<%= Url.RouteUrl("Default", new { Action = "About" }, Request.Url.Scheme) %>
Using @Charlino 's answer as a guide, I came up with this.
The ASP.NET MVC documentation for UrlHelper shows that Url.Action will return a fully-qualified Url if a hostname and protocol are passed in. I created these helpers to force the hostname and protocol to be provided. The multiple overloads mirror the overloads for Url.Action:
using System.Web.Routing;
namespace System.Web.Mvc {
public static class HtmlExtensions {
public static string AbsoluteAction(this UrlHelper url, string actionName) {
Uri requestUrl = url.RequestContext.HttpContext.Request.Url;
return url.Action(actionName, null, (RouteValueDictionary)null,
requestUrl.Scheme, null);
}
public static string AbsoluteAction(this UrlHelper url, string actionName,
object routeValues) {
Uri requestUrl = url.RequestContext.HttpContext.Request.Url;
return url.Action(actionName, null, new RouteValueDictionary(routeValues),
requestUrl.Scheme, null);
}
public static string AbsoluteAction(this UrlHelper url, string actionName,
RouteValueDictionary routeValues) {
Uri requestUrl = url.RequestContext.HttpContext.Request.Url;
return url.Action(actionName, null, routeValues, requestUrl.Scheme, null);
}
public static string AbsoluteAction(this UrlHelper url, string actionName,
string controllerName) {
Uri requestUrl = url.RequestContext.HttpContext.Request.Url;
return url.Action(actionName, controllerName, (RouteValueDictionary)null,
requestUrl.Scheme, null);
}
public static string AbsoluteAction(this UrlHelper url, string actionName,
string controllerName,
object routeValues) {
Uri requestUrl = url.RequestContext.HttpContext.Request.Url;
return url.Action(actionName, controllerName,
new RouteValueDictionary(routeValues), requestUrl.Scheme,
null);
}
public static string AbsoluteAction(this UrlHelper url, string actionName,
string controllerName,
RouteValueDictionary routeValues) {
Uri requestUrl = url.RequestContext.HttpContext.Request.Url;
return url.Action(actionName, controllerName, routeValues, requestUrl.Scheme,
null);
}
public static string AbsoluteAction(this UrlHelper url, string actionName,
string controllerName, object routeValues,
string protocol) {
Uri requestUrl = url.RequestContext.HttpContext.Request.Url;
return url.Action(actionName, controllerName,
new RouteValueDictionary(routeValues), protocol, null);
}
}
}
I'm not sure if there is a built in way to do it, but you could roll your own HtmlHelper method.
Something like the following
namespace System.Web.Mvc
{
public static class HtmlExtensions
{
public static string AbsoluteAction(this HtmlHelper html, string actionUrl)
{
Uri requestUrl = html.ViewContext.HttpContext.Request.Url;
string absoluteAction = string.Format("{0}://{1}{2}",
requestUrl.Scheme,
requestUrl.Authority,
actionUrl);
return absoluteAction;
}
}
}
Then call it like this
<%= Html.AbsoluteAction(Url.Action("Dashboard", "Account"))%> »
HTHs, Charles
Complete answer with arguments would be :
var url = Url.Action("ActionName", "ControllerName", new { id = "arg_value" }, Request.Url.Scheme);
and that will produce an absolute url
Same result but a little cleaner (no string concatenation/formatting):
public static Uri GetBaseUrl(this UrlHelper url)
{
Uri contextUri = new Uri(url.RequestContext.HttpContext.Request.Url, url.RequestContext.HttpContext.Request.RawUrl);
UriBuilder realmUri = new UriBuilder(contextUri) { Path = url.RequestContext.HttpContext.Request.ApplicationPath, Query = null, Fragment = null };
return realmUri.Uri;
}
public static string ActionAbsolute(this UrlHelper url, string actionName, string controllerName)
{
return new Uri(GetBaseUrl(url), url.Action(actionName, controllerName)).AbsoluteUri;
}
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