Problably your action link is rendering something like:
<a href="home/display/1" class="h1">Move to display.aspx</a>
<a href="display">Move to display.aspx</a>
The difference between them is the first one has a css class setted to the h1
style class (not the tag) going to the display action method on the home controller passing the 1 as a id parameter on the url. The second one is going to the display action method (if it is in a view of the home controller it will go to a display action method of the home controller) and it does not have any css class setted. Both action links are rendering a text as Move to display.aspx
. The htmlAttributes on this case does not make difference if you does not have a css setted by h1 class.
What could you do
First, create a stylesheet with a valid name in your css file, something like this:
.display {
color: blue;
/* other css properties*/
}
In your view, render a link with this stylesheet setted on the class
attribute:
<%=Html.ActionLink("Move To Display", "Display", "Home", new { id = 1 }, new { @class="display" }) %>
About htmlAttributes
htmlAttributes parameter is an object that contains the HTML attributes to set for the element. For sample, if you want to add a css class in your output link you could add this attribute by this parameter such as rel
, title
, tabindex
, javascript events such as onclick
etc.
You have a lot of overloads in Html.ActionLink
method. You are not required to pass this parameter but if you need a overloads that has this parameter you can pass just null
and nothing will be output in your html. If you do this:
@Html.ActionLink("Text Link", "Action", "Controller", new { id = 5 }, new { @class = "button", title = "Some Title Content", rel = "10" })
If will be the following signature method:
public static MvcHtmlString ActionLink(
this HtmlHelper htmlHelper,
string linkText,
string actionName,
Object routeValues,
Object htmlAttributes
)
It will render
<a href="Controller/Action/5" class="button" title="Some Title Content" rel="10">Text Link</a>