This concept doesn't really make sense. The model doesn't really exist any more once the page is rendered, until it is reinstantiated on the following POST (assuming it is reinstantiated, i.e. your controller action accepts an argument of the same type). In the meantime, it is just manifested as form fields with name
properties that correspond to what were the model's properties.
You can, however, dynamically create form fields that will (if possible) be mapped back to model properties again when the form is posted.
Create a field, whose name
property matches the name of your model property:
<input type="hidden" id="hdnMyProperty" name="MyProperty" />
Then use jQuery to populate the field's value:
var property = /* Your returned value here */;
$('#hdnMyProperty').val(property);
There are a couple of common ways of achieving this:
- Make an AJAX request to a controller action that returns a
JsonResult
and dynamically create the form field(s) in your Javascript (potentially - as has been mentioned - utilizing something like Knockout).
- Create a controller action that returns a
PartialViewResult
and dynamically insert the returned markup in the appropriate place.
When you issue the next post request, the model binder will try to map this to an appropriate property in the newly-instantiated model.