69

In partial view I work with textboxes like this.

@model Dictionary<string, string>
@Html.TextBox("XYZ", @Model["XYZ"])

How can i generate radiobuttons, and get the desired value in the form collection as YES/NO True/False) ? Currently i am getting null for "ABC" if i select any value for the below.

   <label>@Html.RadioButton("ABC", @Model["ABC"])Yes</label>
   <label>@Html.RadioButton("ABC", @Model["ABC"])No</label>

Controller

        public int Create(int Id, Dictionary<string, string> formValues)
        {
         //Something Something
        }
2

10 Answers 10

73

In order to do this for multiple items do something like:

foreach (var item in Model)
{
    @Html.RadioButtonFor(m => m.item, "Yes") @:Yes
    @Html.RadioButtonFor(m => m.item, "No") @:No
}
9
  • 1
    I call all my partial views passing @model Dictionary<string, string> i need a way to return (True, False) or (Yes,No) for selected values in radio buttons.
    – Nanu
    May 29, 2012 at 19:56
  • 1
    @KirkWoll his code wouldn't bind to a Dictionary<string, string> (as his model states). Based on a Yes No response, a bool is probably best, a Nullable bool if you're allowing none to be selected though. May 29, 2012 at 19:58
  • @KirkWoll Check my updated edit, I originally thought he just wanted a Yes No for one option, thus recommending a bool. May 29, 2012 at 20:01
  • 1
    @Nikhil Ah well that's fine, you'll have either "Yes" or "No" as the values then (or null if nothing was selected). Try my updated edit and keep your model as Dictionary<string, string> May 29, 2012 at 20:13
  • 3
    @MichaelBrennt The "@:" is used to break out of Razor, similar to the <text> tag as Yes and No are basically HTML/non-C# code (you may not need it depending on your structure). Dec 11, 2013 at 13:07
25

Simply :

   <label>@Html.RadioButton("ABC", True)Yes</label>
   <label>@Html.RadioButton("ABC", False)No</label>

But you should always use strongly typed model as suggested by cacho.

1
  • You have to be careful as none of the posted solutions perform any kind of server-side validation. Here's an elegant solution that performs both client-side and server-side validation to ensure valid data is posted to the model. stackoverflow.com/a/56185910/3960200 May 17, 2019 at 12:07
15

I done this in a way like:

  @Html.RadioButtonFor(model => model.Gender, "M", false)@Html.Label("Male")
  @Html.RadioButtonFor(model => model.Gender, "F", false)@Html.Label("Female")
15

I solve the same problem with this SO answer.

Basically it binds the radio button to a boolean property of a Strongly Typed Model.

@Html.RadioButton("blah", !Model.blah) Yes 
@Html.RadioButton("blah", Model.blah) No 

Hope it helps!

0
10

MVC5 Razor Views

Below example will also associate labels with radio buttons (radio button will be selected upon clicking on the relevant label)

// replace "Yes", "No" --> with, true, false if needed
@Html.RadioButtonFor(m => m.Compatible, "Yes", new { id = "compatible" })
@Html.Label("compatible", "Compatible")

@Html.RadioButtonFor(m => m.Compatible, "No", new { id = "notcompatible" })
@Html.Label("notcompatible", "Not Compatible")
1
  • This is the better answer because it addresses the rendering of unique id attributes. Jun 1, 2019 at 20:12
8
<label>@Html.RadioButton("ABC", "YES")Yes</label>
<label>@Html.RadioButton("ABC", "NO")No</label>
6

MVC Razor provides one elegant Html Helper called RadioButton with two parameters (this is general, But we can overload it uptil five parameters) i.e. one with the group name and other being the value

<div class="col-md-10">
    Male:   @Html.RadioButton("Gender", "Male")
    Female: @Html.RadioButton("Gender", "Female")
</div>                         
1
3
<p>@Html.RadioButtonFor(x => x.type, "Item1")Item1</p>
<p>@Html.RadioButtonFor(x => x.type, "Item2")Item2</p>
<p>@Html.RadioButtonFor(x => x.type, "Item3")Item3</p>
0
1

This works for me.

@{ var dic = new Dictionary<string, string>() { { "checked", "" } }; }
@Html.RadioButtonFor(_ => _.BoolProperty, true, (@Model.BoolProperty)? dic: null) Yes
@Html.RadioButtonFor(_ => _.BoolProperty, false, ([email protected])? dic: null) No
0

I wanted to share one way to do the radio button (and entire HTML form) without using the @Html.RadioButtonFor helper, although I think @Html.RadioButtonFor is probably the better and newer way (for one thing, it's strongly typed, so is closely linked to theModelProperty). Nevertheless, here's an old-fashioned, different way you can do it:

    <form asp-action="myActionMethod" method="post">
        <h3>Do you like pizza?</h3>
        <div class="checkbox">
            <label>
                <input asp-for="likesPizza"/> Yes
            </label>
        </div>
    </form>

This code can go in a myView.cshtml file, and also uses classes to get the radio-button (checkbox) formatting.

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