If you do not want to pass in a variable you can do the following: Html. ActionLink("View Performances", "Details", "Productions", null, new {@class = "button"}) if you just want to add the class. Also, the "Productions" part of this element is not required.
Html. ActionLink creates a hyperlink on a view page and the user clicks it to navigate to a new URL. It does not link to a view directly, rather it links to a controller's action.
If you need to pass through the reference to an object that is stored on the server, then try setting a parameter of the link to give a reference to the object stored on the server, that can then be retrieved by the action (example, the Id of the menuItem in question).
Yes, there is a difference. Html. ActionLink generates an <a href=".."></a> tag whereas Url. Action returns only an url.
In Bootstrap the active
class needs to be applied to the <li>
element and not the <a>
. See the first example here: http://getbootstrap.com/components/#navbar
The way you handle your UI style based on what is active or not has nothing to do with ASP.NET MVC's ActionLink
helper. This is the proper solution to follow how the Bootstrap framework was built.
<ul class="nav navbar-nav">
<li class="active">@Html.ActionLink("Home", "Index", "Home")</li>
<li>@Html.ActionLink("About", "About", "Home")</li>
<li>@Html.ActionLink("Contact", "Contact", "Home")</li>
</ul>
Edit:
Since you will most likely be reusing your menu on multiple pages, it would be smart to have a way to apply that selected class automatically based on the current page rather than copy the menu multiple times and do it manually.
The easiest way is to simply use the values contained in ViewContext.RouteData
, namely the Action
and Controller
values. We could build on what you currently have with something like this:
<ul class="nav navbar-nav">
<li class="@(ViewContext.RouteData.Values["Action"].ToString() == "Index" ? "active" : "")">@Html.ActionLink("Home", "Index", "Home")</li>
<li class="@(ViewContext.RouteData.Values["Action"].ToString() == "About" ? "active" : "")">@Html.ActionLink("About", "About", "Home")</li>
<li class="@(ViewContext.RouteData.Values["Action"].ToString() == "Contact" ? "active" : "")">@Html.ActionLink("Contact", "Contact", "Home")</li>
</ul>
It's not pretty in code, but it'll get the job done and allow you to extract your menu into a partial view if you like. There are ways to do this in a much cleaner way, but since you're just getting started I'll leave it at that. Best of luck learning ASP.NET MVC!
Late edit:
This question seems to be getting a bit of traffic so I figured I'd throw in a more elegant solution using an HtmlHelper
extension.
Edit 03-24-2015: Had to rewrite this method to allow for multiple actions and controllers triggering the selected behavior, as well as handling for when the method is called from a child action partial view, thought I'd share the update!
public static string IsSelected(this HtmlHelper html, string controllers = "", string actions = "", string cssClass = "selected")
{
ViewContext viewContext = html.ViewContext;
bool isChildAction = viewContext.Controller.ControllerContext.IsChildAction;
if (isChildAction)
viewContext = html.ViewContext.ParentActionViewContext;
RouteValueDictionary routeValues = viewContext.RouteData.Values;
string currentAction = routeValues["action"].ToString();
string currentController = routeValues["controller"].ToString();
if (String.IsNullOrEmpty(actions))
actions = currentAction;
if (String.IsNullOrEmpty(controllers))
controllers = currentController;
string[] acceptedActions = actions.Trim().Split(',').Distinct().ToArray();
string[] acceptedControllers = controllers.Trim().Split(',').Distinct().ToArray();
return acceptedActions.Contains(currentAction) && acceptedControllers.Contains(currentController) ?
cssClass : String.Empty;
}
Works with .NET Core:
public static string IsSelected(this IHtmlHelper htmlHelper, string controllers, string actions, string cssClass = "selected")
{
string currentAction = htmlHelper.ViewContext.RouteData.Values["action"] as string;
string currentController = htmlHelper.ViewContext.RouteData.Values["controller"] as string;
IEnumerable<string> acceptedActions = (actions ?? currentAction).Split(',');
IEnumerable<string> acceptedControllers = (controllers ?? currentController).Split(',');
return acceptedActions.Contains(currentAction) && acceptedControllers.Contains(currentController) ?
cssClass : String.Empty;
}
Sample usage:
<ul>
<li class="@Html.IsSelected(actions: "Home", controllers: "Default")">
<a href="@Url.Action("Home", "Default")">Home</a>
</li>
<li class="@Html.IsSelected(actions: "List,Detail", controllers: "Default")">
<a href="@Url.Action("List", "Default")">List</a>
</li>
</ul>
Extension:
public static MvcHtmlString LiActionLink(this HtmlHelper html, string text, string action, string controller)
{
var context = html.ViewContext;
if (context.Controller.ControllerContext.IsChildAction)
context = html.ViewContext.ParentActionViewContext;
var routeValues = context.RouteData.Values;
var currentAction = routeValues["action"].ToString();
var currentController = routeValues["controller"].ToString();
var str = String.Format("<li role=\"presentation\"{0}>{1}</li>",
currentAction.Equals(action, StringComparison.InvariantCulture) &&
currentController.Equals(controller, StringComparison.InvariantCulture) ?
" class=\"active\"" :
String.Empty, html.ActionLink(text, action, controller).ToHtmlString()
);
return new MvcHtmlString(str);
}
Usage:
<ul class="nav navbar-nav">
@Html.LiActionLink("About", "About", "Home")
@Html.LiActionLink("Contact", "Contact", "Home")
</ul>
I manged to do this by adding a view bag parameter in asp.net mvc. Here what have i done
Added ViewBag.Current = "Scheduler";
like parameter in each page
In layout page
<ul class="nav navbar-nav">
<li class="@(ViewBag.Current == "Scheduler" ? "active" : "") "><a href="@Url.Action("Index","Scheduler")" target="_self">Scheduler</a></li>
</ul>
This solved my problem.
May be little late. But hope this helps.
public static class Utilities
{
public static string IsActive(this HtmlHelper html,
string control,
string action)
{
var routeData = html.ViewContext.RouteData;
var routeAction = (string)routeData.Values["action"];
var routeControl = (string)routeData.Values["controller"];
// both must match
var returnActive = control == routeControl &&
action == routeAction;
return returnActive ? "active" : "";
}
}
And usage as follow:
<div class="navbar-collapse collapse">
<ul class="nav navbar-nav">
<li class='@Html.IsActive("Home", "Index")'>
@Html.ActionLink("Home", "Index", "Home")
</li>
<li class='@Html.IsActive("Home", "About")'>
@Html.ActionLink("About", "About", "Home")
</li>
<li class='@Html.IsActive("Home", "Contact")'>
@Html.ActionLink("Contact", "Contact", "Home")
</li>
</ul>
</div>
Got reference from http://www.codingeverything.com/2014/05/mvcbootstrapactivenavbar.html
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