1

I have the following method in five controllers:

    public ActionResult Index(string page, string title) {
        var vm = new BaseViewModel(); 
        vm.Role = GetRoleNumber(User);
        vm.MenuItems = contentService.GetMenuItems("00", vm.Role);
        vm.Menu = pageService.GetMenu(vm.MenuItems, Request.FilePath);

        // difference code here for each controller
    }

All my controllers inherit from a controller called BaseController.

Is there a way I could move this code into my base controller and call it? If so then what would be the best way to implement this?

4 Answers 4

4

This is an exact candidate for the Repository Pattern. You could create all of these in your Repository class and call that method in each ActionResult method

public void Repository : IRepository
{
   public GetMyBaseViewModel()
   {
    //..implementation here
   }
}

public interface IRepository
{
  BaseViewModel GetMyBaseViewModel();
}

.... and in your controllers : ...

public class HomeController : Controller
    {
        //private repository member
        private readonly IRepository _repository;

        //controller constructors
        //injecting the repository here
        public HomeController() : this(new Repository()) 
        {

        }
        public HomeController(IRepository repository)
        {
          _repository = repository;
        }

        //methods that call the repository for the vm data context
        public ActionResult Index()
        {
            var vm = _repository.GetMyBaseViewModel();
            return View();
        }
}
3

You could make an abstract ActionResult method in your base controller:

protected BaseViewModel vm;

public ActionResult Index(string page, string title) {
    vm = new BaseViewModel(); 
    vm.Role = GetRoleNumber(User);
    vm.MenuItems = contentService.GetMenuItems("00", vm.Role);
    vm.Menu = pageService.GetMenu(vm.MenuItems, Request.FilePath);

    try
    {
        return IndexSupplemental();
    }
    catch(NotImplementedException ex)
    {
        // Log and move on; the abstract method is not implemented.
    }

    return View();
}

protected abstract ActionResult IndexSupplemental();

Then every controller would have to implement this abstract method.

3
  • But the new IndexSupplemental would need to know about the vm object that I constructed as the code after these four lines makes use of the vm object. Is there a way I could do that. I guess also I would need to pass the page and title up to IndexSupplemental.
    – Angela
    Sep 7, 2012 at 13:57
  • @Angela you can pass it as a parameter to IndexSupplemental method. Sep 7, 2012 at 13:58
  • While this a good solution for code reusability it automatically creates Index actions for derived controllers and forces you to implement a method you may not need. Although this can be perfectly fine depending on the scenario. Sep 7, 2012 at 14:15
2

You can move it to a method in your base controller and call it when you need it.

public class BaseController : Controller
{
    protected BaseViewModel _viewModel;

    public void InitializeViewModel() {

        vm = new BaseViewModel(); 
        vm.Role = GetRoleNumber(User);
        vm.MenuItems = contentService.GetMenuItems("00", vm.Role);
        vm.Menu = pageService.GetMenu(vm.MenuItems, Request.FilePath);
    }
}

An example:

public class MyController : BaseController
{
    public ActionResult Index(string page, string title)
    {
        InitializeViewModel();

        DoSomething(_viewModel);
    }
}
4
  • Wait this is good but I only need to do all of this for the Index action method. If I put this in the constructor it will get run all the time and I just need it for Index.
    – Angela
    Sep 7, 2012 at 13:54
  • Thanks. The second method looks a lot better for me. What I am a bit confused on is how could I pass the parameters back. I will need vm, page and title in my Index action method in the controllers. Can you confirm I should rename my viewModel to _vm or something like that. Is the naming convention _xx for private and protected?
    – Angela
    Sep 7, 2012 at 13:59
  • @Angela you can access the protected Viewmodel field from your child class by using _viewModel
    – Manatherin
    Sep 7, 2012 at 14:07
  • It's entirely up to you. It's pretty common prefixing private instance fields with underscore. I guess protected fields are pascal cased but it doesn't matter which on you choose as long as you have a persistent style. Sep 7, 2012 at 14:09
1

In my projects most of my actions will return a viewmodel that inherits from the BaseViewModel but there are exceptions to this. So what I did was something like this in ControllerBase:

    protected override void OnActionExecuted(ActionExecutedContext filterContext)
    {
        base.OnActionExecuted(filterContext);
        var authData = GetUserData();
        if (authData != null)
        {
            var result = filterContext.Result as ViewResult;
            if (result != null)
            {
                var vm = result.Model as ViewModelBase;
                if (vm != null)
                {
                    vm.UserId = authData.UserID;
                    vm.UserName = User.Identity.Name;
                }
            }

        }
    }

What you could do otherwise, as I expect your ViewModel to be of different types, is to create a method similar to this in ControllerBase:

NOTE This does not do what you want. I'm just showing a technique for creating a new instance of a derived class with some initialization code.

    protected T Command<T>() where T : BaseCommand, new()
    {
        var command = new T();
        command.IP = Request.UserHostAddress;
        if (User != null && User.Identity.IsAuthenticated)
        {

            var authData = GetUserData();
            if (authData != null)
            {
                command.UserId = authData.UserID;

            }
        }
        return command;
    }

Which would be used as

var command = Command<CreateUserCommand>();

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