19

How to return multiple variables on JsonResult method

for example i want to return this two variables:

string result = "Successed";
string ID = "32"

I know how to return only one string:

return Json("Inserted");

6 Answers 6

67
 public ActionResult YourAction()
 {
   var result=new { Result="Successed", ID="32"};
   return Json(result, JsonRequestBehavior.AllowGet);
 }

EDIT : As per the comment "How to get this data in client"

You can use getJSON from view to get this data like this

$(function(){
   $.getJSON('YourController/YourAction', function(data) {
      alert(data.Result);
      alert(data.ID);
   });
});

Make sure you have jQuery loaded in your view for this code to work.

3
  • public JsonResult YourAction()
    – asawyer
    May 15, 2012 at 15:40
  • 1
    @asawyer: Both will work. JsonResult inherited from ActionResult.
    – Shyju
    May 15, 2012 at 15:41
  • thank you and can you say how i can get this data in view(success:)? May 15, 2012 at 15:56
5

Return an anonymous object.

return Json( new { Result = result, Id = ID } );

I normally do something like this:

public enum NoticeTypes
{
    Default,
    UpdateComplete,
    ResponsePending,
    Notice,
    Error,
    Redirect,
    WaitAndRetryAttempt
}
public class AjaxJsonResponse
{
    public UserNotice Notice { get; set; }
    public object Data { get; set; }
    private AjaxJsonResponse() { }
    public static JsonResult Create(UserNotice Notice,object Data)
    {
        return new JsonResult()
        { 
            Data = new 
            { 
                Notice = Notice,
                Data = Data
            } 
        };
    }
}

So that I can write my javascript to always expect ajax calls to return data in a certain format.

return AjaxResponse.Create(NoticeTypes.UpdateComplete, new 
{ 
    Result = result, 
    Id = ID 
});

Now you can do things like an Ajax Complete global handler that can intercept things like Redirect or WaitAndRetry before the normal handler gets it, and to have a standard way of communicating additional information about the returned data that is the same across your application.

2

On your controller use something like this:

var result = new { data= stuff, data2 = otherstuff };
return Json(result, JsonRequestBehavior.AllowGet);

If you are using .ajax() on your JavaScript you can use your data acessing like this:

$.ajax(
            {
                url: '/Controller/Method/',
                type: 'POST',
                data: 'data=' + data,
                success: function (result) {
                    $('#id').html("");
                    $(result.data).appendTo('#id');
                    $('#id2').html("");
                    $(result.data2).appendTo('#id2');
                    $('#id').show();
                    $('#id2').show();
                }
            });
2

1. Return as collection inside anonymous type This is the java script/ajax call and the complete html.

< script type = "text/javascript" >
  $(document).ready(function() {
    $("#ddlProduct").hide();
    $("#ddlRegion").change(function() {
      $("#ddlProduct").show();
      $("#ddlProduct").empty();
      $.ajax({
        type: "Post",
        url: "@Url.Action("
        GetProducts ")",
        dataType: "Json",
        data: {
          id: $("#ddlRegion").val()
        },
        success: function(jsonData) {
          console.log($(jsonData).length);
          if ($(jsonData.ProductList).length == 0) {
            $("#divProduct").hide();
          } else {
            $("#divProduct").show();
          }

          $.each(jsonData.ProductList, function(i, Product) {
            $("#ddlProduct").append('<option value=" ' + Product.Value + ' ">' + Product.Text + '</option>');
          });
          if ($(jsonData.FlavourList).length == 0) {
            $("#divFlavour").hide();
          } else {
            $("#divFlavour").show();
            $.each(jsonData.FlavourList, function(i, flavour) {
              $("#ddlFlavour").append('<option value=" ' + flavour.Value + ' ">' + flavour.Text + '</option>');
            });
          }
        },
        error: function(ex) {
          alert("Failed to return Products <br/>");
        }
      });
      return false;
    })
  }); //Document Ready Ends
< /script>
@{ ViewBag.Title = "Products Drop Down Demo"; }

<h2>Products Drop Down Demo</h2>
@using (Html.BeginForm()) {
<div>@Html.Label("Select Region:")</div>
<div class="editor-field">
  @if (ViewData.ContainsKey("Region")) { @Html.DropDownList("ddlRegion", ViewData["Region"] as List
  <SelectListItem>) }
</div>
<div id="divProduct" hidden="hidden">
  <br />
  <div>
    Select a Product:
  </div>
  <div>
    @Html.DropDownList("ddlProduct", new SelectList(string.Empty, "Value", "Text"), "Please select a Product", new { style = "width:250px", @class = "dropdown1" })
  </div>
</div>
<div id="divFlavour" hidden="hidden">
  <div>
    <br />Select a Flavour:
  </div>
  <div>
    @Html.DropDownList("ddlFlavour", new SelectList(string.Empty, "Value", "Text"), "Please select a Flavour", new { style = "width:250px", @class = "dropdown1" })
  </div>
</div>
}


This is the controller action that returns the data I tested and it is working.

               public ActionResult LoadRegion()
    {
        List<SelectListItem> Regions = new List<SelectListItem>();
        Regions.Add(new SelectListItem { Text = "Select A Region", Value = "0" });
        Regions.Add(new SelectListItem { Text = "Asea", Value = "1" });
        Regions.Add(new SelectListItem { Text = "Australia", Value = "4" });
        Regions.Add(new SelectListItem { Text = "America", Value = "5" });
        Regions.Add(new SelectListItem { Text = "Europe", Value = "6" });
        ViewData["Region"] = Regions;
        return View();
    }

public JsonResult GetProducts(string id) { List products = new List(); List flavours = new List();

        products.Add(new SelectListItem { Text = "Select Product", Value = "0" });
        products.Add(new SelectListItem { Text = "Cheese", Value = "1" });
        products.Add(new SelectListItem { Text = "Sause", Value = "2" });
        products.Add(new SelectListItem { Text = "Veberage", Value = "3" });
        products.Add(new SelectListItem { Text = "Snacks", Value = "4" });

        flavours.Add(new SelectListItem { Text = "Select Flavour", Value = "0", Selected = true });
        flavours.Add(new SelectListItem { Text = "Sweet", Value = "1" });
        flavours.Add(new SelectListItem { Text = "Sour", Value = "2" });
        flavours.Add(new SelectListItem { Text = "Spicy", Value = "3" });

        var myResult = new
        {
            ProductList = products,
            FlavourList = flavours
        };
        return Json(myResult, JsonRequestBehavior.AllowGet);

}

Let me know if you have any issue running this code. Thanks Premjeet

1

You should return an object with multiple properties:

return Json(new {
    result, 
    ID
});

The JSON serializer will convert C# anonymous types into JSON object literals.

1

In Action method :

Using new keywork

var genericResult = new { homeworkData = homework, attachmentData = homeworkAttachment };
var result = this.Json(genericResult, JsonRequestBehavior.AllowGet);
return result;

In jquery side :

function getHomewrokDetailResponse(dataSent, result) {
if (result && result.homeworkData) {
    homeworkId = result.homeworkData.DASH_EMPLOYEE_HOMEWORK_ID;

    ....
}
1
  • It displays exactly what I was looking for.
    – Auguste
    Oct 17, 2018 at 20:02

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.