The If Condition The if statement returns true or false, based on your test: The if statement starts a code block. The condition is written inside parenthesis. The code inside the braces is executed if the test is true.
I believe that there can still be and valid logic on views. But for this kind of things I agree with @BigMike, it is better placed on the model. Having said that the problem can be solved in three ways:
Your answer (assuming this works, I haven't tried this):
<div class="details @(@Model.Details.Count > 0 ? "show" : "hide")">
Second option:
@if (Model.Details.Count > 0) {
<div class="details show">
}
else {
<div class="details hide">
}
Third option:
<div class="@("details " + (Model.Details.Count>0 ? "show" : "hide"))">
This:
<div class="details @(Model.Details.Count > 0 ? "show" : "hide")">
will render this:
<div class="details hide">
and is the mark-up I want.
You can add property to your model as follows:
public string DetailsClass { get { return Details.Count > 0 ? "show" : "hide" } }
and then your view will be simpler and will contain no logic at all:
<div class="details @Model.DetailsClass"/>
This will work even with many classes and will not render class if it is null:
<div class="@Model.Class1 @Model.Class2"/>
with 2 not null properties will render:
<div class="class1 class2"/>
if class1 is null
<div class=" class2"/>
You can use String.Format function to add second class based on condition:
<div class="@String.Format("details {0}", Details.Count > 0 ? "show" : "hide")">
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