2

I have two EF models where one derives from the other.

public class Party
{
    [Key]
    public Guid Key { get; set; }

    [Required, MaxLength(50)]
    public string Name { get; set; }
}

public class Customer : Party
{

    [Range(1, int.MaxValue)]
    public int ID { get; set; }
}

When I put in the properties in a EDIT view using hidden fields like this:

@Html.HiddenFor(model => model.ID)
@Html.HiddenFor(model => model.Key)

both fields get the same value, and I get a validation error since the ID property cannot be a GUID.

<input data-val="true" data-val-number="The field ID must be a number." data-val-range="Feltet ID må være mellom 1 og 2147483647." data-val-range-max="2147483647" data-val-range-min="1" data-val-required="Feltet ID er obligatorisk." id="ID" name="ID" type="hidden" value="3b9ba191-3a3c-47d9-8bb7-48cc552cc6ec" />
<input data-val="true" data-val-required="Feltet Key er obligatorisk." id="Key" name="Key" type="hidden" value="3b9ba191-3a3c-47d9-8bb7-48cc552cc6ec" />

How can I tell EF that the property called ID is NOT the primary key (since I presume EF assumes this)?

3
  • Is this because of the controller url? my route setup is {controller}/{action}/{id} and the url for my edit action is: localhost:54907/Customer/Edit/…
    – Vincent
    Nov 23, 2012 at 12:41
  • If I rename the ID property to e.g CustomerID and apply the Column attribute to preserve database structure I can confirm that the field no longer equals the Key property. My question stands however, on how I can keep my ID property without it being set to the id part of the url.
    – Vincent
    Nov 23, 2012 at 13:16
  • Can you please show the code that you use for the DbContext and how you are mapping the discriminator ??? And also which version of EntityFramework are you using ...
    – Arno 2501
    Nov 29, 2012 at 8:43

1 Answer 1

0

Since any domain model has to have an ID in EF just create another property in your customer class and decorate it with [Key]

public class Customer : Party
{
    [Key]
    public int CustomID { get; set; }

    [Range(1, int.MaxValue)]
    public int ID { get; set; }
}
3
  • No, I don't think that is correct since Party has a key property. I think the problem is the ID property being assigned the value from the url string.
    – Vincent
    Nov 27, 2012 at 7:56
  • Ok then what is your database schema ? Do you have one table for customer and one for party ? What are the primary keys in the database ?
    – Arno 2501
    Nov 27, 2012 at 8:06
  • Both the party class and the customer class is stored in the same table = Party having a column called Discriminator telling the EF which type each record is. The primary key as my model shows above = Key.
    – Vincent
    Nov 28, 2012 at 9:39

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