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So somebody asked me the question:

When would I return View() and when would I return PartialView()?

My immdiate reaction was, if it's a patial use PartialView(). Then I realised that I have quite often returned View() for a partial view with no, apparent, detremental effects?! So what's the point in the return PartialView() call?

I found this question What's the difference between “return View()” and “return PartialView()”. This appears to be particular to MVC2. i.e. talks about .aspx and .ascx control extensions. Using Razor all our views are .cshtml whether they are partial or not.

Which got my thinking is the PartialView() just a hangover from MVC2 and not really relevant in MVC3+ (When using Razor anyway)? Or am I missing some crucial feature of PartialView()?

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2 Answers 2

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tl;dr: PartialView() does not use a layout for the view being returned.


You can set a default layout file within _ViewStart.cshtml (located in the Views folder) which will then be used by all views. By doing that, you avoid having to set the Layout property within each view. PartialView() will not include that layout file or any other.

If you want to return a partial view, e.g. in a child action called using @Html.Action(action, controller), use PartialView. If you want to return a "full" view including the layout, use View().

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  • Doesn't really answer my question. My layouts are generally declared in the View. There is no reason that I can see why I can't return View for a @Html.Action? Nothing breaks if I do?
    – Liam
    Sep 27, 2013 at 10:50
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    @Liam You didn't say anything about @Html.Action in your question, so I pointed out the difference of the two methods in treating the layout files. Sep 27, 2013 at 10:56
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    Or am I missing some crucial feature of PartialView()?, yes you are. Views should not be aware of what layout they are using, otherwise they are not re-usable. Oct 2, 2013 at 6:19
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MSDN Reference:

If you contrast the MSDN definition for ViewResult() Object with the MSDN definition for PartialViewResult() Object

you find the only difference is that ViewResult has an extra property:

public string MasterName { get; set; }

Otherwise, both Objects inherit from ViewResultBase and seem to inherit all other properties and methods from the base class.

Unfortunately, the implementation of the abstract method ExecuteResult() is not published, but I have no doubt it uses the MasterName field to find and render the Master Layer.


Our shared experience:

Just like you, I have returned partial views =using View(). I don't recommend it. But the apparent difference isn't big.

It does seem a touch wasteful to have an extra object just for MasterName, but the more important difference is probably the implementation of ExecuteResult().

When you choose View() method and create a ViewResult Object rather than using PartialView() to create a PartialViewResult Object, you are being less efficient; your application is doing the extra work of checking if your MasterName field is assigned.

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