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I have a knockout model that I'm trying to post to an MVC4 controller. A simplified version looks like this:

var ItemModel = function (id, name) {
    var self = this;

    self.id = ko.observable(id);
    self.name = ko.observable(name);
};

var Entry = function () {
    var self = this;

    self.Id = ko.observable();
    self.areas = ko.observableArray([]);
};

var EntryModel = function () {
    var self = this;

    self.entry = new Entry();

    self.save = function () {
        $.post("/Edit", ko.toJS(self.entry), function (data) {
            ...
        })};
    };
};

If I add two areas to my model, like this:

viewModel.entry.areas.push(new ItemModel(1, "A"));
viewModel.entry.areas.push(new ItemModel(2, "B"));

and post it using viewModel.save I get two areas from the model binder, but no data in them (i.e. id = 0, name = "").

After some research I found that I'm posting data like this:

id = 1
name = test
area[0][id] = 1
area[0][name] = "A"
area[1][id] = 2
area[1][name] = "B"

and that MVC expects this:

id = 1
name = test
area[0].id = 1
area[0].name = "A"
area[1].id = 2
area[1].name = "B"

How do I get this posted as expected?

6
  • How are you sending the data to the server? jQuery AJAX? XmlHttpRequest? Could you show that code? Apr 22, 2014 at 2:39
  • I think you might be posting the array incorrectly, I see that you are using jquery to post. Look at the answer for this post: stackoverflow.com/questions/12572856/…. Try posting data using jquery $.ajax function with dataType and contentType set. Also try setting option traditional to true as well. Apr 22, 2014 at 2:54
  • @PatrickSteele, the posting code is in the save function on the EntryModel.
    – Haas
    Apr 22, 2014 at 11:06
  • @MyP3uK, thanks. The question you pointed me to fixes the posting. I'm still trying to understand why my data is getting serialized the way it is (maybe ko.ToJS?) and if there's a way to get this working correctly.
    – Haas
    Apr 22, 2014 at 11:25
  • Try adding an "alert(ko.toJSON(self.entry))" right before the $.post. This will let you verify you actually have the proper data to send. And have you looked at the data going over the wire using something like Chrome Developer Tools or Fiddler? Apr 22, 2014 at 11:35

1 Answer 1

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Your model contains the array so you have to stringify your model and send the resultant string to the controller. You can try this:

var EntryModel = function () {
    var self = this;

    self.entry = new Entry();

    //toJSON function produce the JSON string representing entry model
    var dataToSend = ko.toJSON(self.entry);

    self.save = function () {
        $.post("/Edit", dataToSend, function (data) {
            ...
        })};
    };
};
4
  • This will post a string to my controller. It can be worked on and deserialized, but it's not the question I have.
    – Haas
    Apr 22, 2014 at 11:04
  • @Haas its not a string, its a JSON string representing your viewModel. And you do not have to deserialize it, MVC's default model binder will do this job for you.
    – Gaurav
    Apr 22, 2014 at 11:12
  • I tried it and all I got was an empty view model on the controller.
    – Haas
    Apr 22, 2014 at 11:32
  • can you post your server side view model code structure ?
    – Gaurav
    Apr 22, 2014 at 12:29

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