I want to create custom input, so I created this component:
MyInputComponent.razor
:
<div> <input type="text" @bind="BindingValue" /> </div> @code { [Parameter] public string BindingValue { get; set; } }
Then the usage:
<EditForm Model="model" OnValidSubmit="Submit"> <MyInputComponent BindingValue="model.Name" /> </EditForm> @code { User model = new User() { Name = "My Name" }; private void Submit() { // here I found model.Name = null; } }
When I debug MyInputComponent
, I found the value as I have entered. But when I submit the form, the value is null.
What is missing?
The Blazor framework handles null to empty string conversions for two-way binding to a <select> 's value.
Bind to a Model To bind the DropDownList to a model: Populate its Data parameter with the collection of items you want in the dropdown. Set the TextField and ValueField parameters to point to the corresponding property names of the model. Set the Value property to the intial value of the component (optional).
You can use the bind attribute on any element to bind the value. In blazor, we'll have a property assigned some value in the functions and use the property in the HTML template. Let's get this done. So, when we run the app, the label tag will display “red” as a text in the label.
Quoting Blazor docs:
Component parameters
Binding recognizes component parameters, where @bind-{property} can bind a property value across components.
For your page:
<EditForm Model="model" OnValidSubmit="Submit"> <MyInputComponent @bind-BindingValue="model.Name" /> </EditForm>
The child component MyInputComponent
:
<div> <InputText type="text" @bind-Value="@BindingValue" /> </div> @code { private string _value; [Parameter] public string BindingValue { get => _value; set { if (_value == value ) return; _value = value; BindingValueChanged.InvokeAsync(value); } } [Parameter] public EventCallback<string> BindingValueChanged { get; set; } }
Notice
EventCallback<string> BindingValueChanged
.BindingValue
and BindingValueChanged
as identifiers, but, you can use just Value
and ValueChanged
. Then will be: <MyInputComponent @bind-Value="model.Name" />
Try it at BlazorFiddle.
(Edited 2022) Full documented now at: Binding with component parameters
Edited: See Option 2 below for a clean solution:
If you want to put your component inside an EditForm and deal with validations, or take other actions using the onchange event, you should to raise EditContext.NotifyFieldChanged
. You have 2 options to do it.
You can get EditContext
from CascadeParameter
and invoke NotifyFieldChanged
by hand:
[CascadingParameter] EditContext EditContext { get; set; } = default!; [Parameter] public Expression<Func<string>>? ValueExpression { get; set; } #endregion #region bindedValue [Parameter] public EventCallback<string> ValueChanged { get; set; } private string _value { set; get; } = ""; [Parameter] public string Value { get => _value; set { if (_value == value) return; _value = value; ValueChanged.InvokeAsync(value); var fieldIdentifier = FieldIdentifier.Create(ValueExpression); EditContext.NotifyFieldChanged(fieldIdentifier); } }
You can inherit from InputBase<string>
and just implement TryParseValueFromString
. InputBase
will do the work for you,When you inherit from InputBase
you have Value
, ValueChanged
, EditContext
, etc.
protected override bool TryParseValueFromString(string? value, out string result, [NotNullWhen(false)] out string? validationErrorMessage) { result = value ?? ""; validationErrorMessage = null; return true; }
If you love us? You can donate to us via Paypal or buy me a coffee so we can maintain and grow! Thank you!
Donate Us With