Inside razor view I used model for rendering label like
@Html.LabelFor(model => model.MyName, htmlAttributes: new { @class = "control-label col-md-6" })
and now I want to use it's value instead of data annotation attr. value so I tried with DisplayFor like
@Html.DisplayFor(model => model.MyName, new { @class = "control-label col-md-6" })
this css class control-label col-md-6 is not apply.
Why?
The difference is that @Html.LabelFor helper function renders a <label></label> tag, and the @Html.DisplayFor helper function does not render any html tag, instead it renders plain text. For example the following code:
@Html.DisplayFor(model => model.MyName, new { @class = "control-label col-md-6" })
returns raw text:
Martin
considering that MyName had the value "Martin". And the code:
@Html.LabelFor(model => model.MyName, htmlAttributes: new { @class = "control-label col-md-6" })
will return:
<label class="control-label col-md-6">Martin</label>
Consider the difference.
Use following (if you want to use @Html.DisplayFor):
<span class"control-label col-md-6">@Html.DisplayFor(model => model.MyName)</span>
DisplayFor doesn't work like the other *For helpers. Like EditorFor, it's what's referred to as a "templated helper". In other words, what it renders is controlled by a template that can be modified. Importantly, for both of these methods, if you look up their documentation in MSDN, you'll see that the parameter that would normal correspond to htmlAttributes with the other helpers, instead refers to additionalViewData with these two. This is because, again, their output is controlled by essentially views, which take ViewData.
Additionally, with DisplayFor in particular, the default templates pretty much just output the value, with no HTML. If you pass a string property, for example, the output will be the value of that string and nothing else. Therefore, there's nothing to tie the HTML attributes to, even if you could pass them in.
If you want to do what you're trying to do, you'd have to create custom display templates. This can be done by adding views named after types (e.g. String, Boolean, Byte etc.) or members of the DataType enum (CreditCard, EmailAddress etc.), to Views\Shared\DisplayTemplates. For example, if you created a view at Views\Shared\DisplayTemplates\String.cshtml, then when you called DisplayFor with a property of type string, that view would be utilized to render it. You could then wrap the value that would otherwise be just output directly in some HTML of your choice and utilize ViewData to apply the appropriate HTML attributes. For example:
<span class="@ViewData["class"]">@ViewData.TemplateInfo.FormattedModelValue</span>
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