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I am working on an MVC2 application and want to set the maxlength attributes of the text inputs.

I have already defined the stringlength attribute on the Model object using data annotations and it is validating the length of entered strings correctly.

I do not want to repeat the same setting in my views by setting the max length attribute manually when the model already has the information. Is there any way to do this?

Code snippets below:

From the Model:

[Required, StringLength(50)]
public string Address1 { get; set; }

From the View:

<%= Html.LabelFor(model => model.Address1) %>
<%= Html.TextBoxFor(model => model.Address1, new { @class = "text long" })%>
<%= Html.ValidationMessageFor(model => model.Address1) %>

What I want to avoid doing is:

<%= Html.TextBoxFor(model => model.Address1, new { @class = "text long", maxlength="50" })%>

I want to get this output:

<input type="text" name="Address1" maxlength="50" class="text long"/>

Is there any way to do this?

share|improve this question
I am sorry, I don't know what Data Annonations is good for? I mean, what if the length criteria changes? Can this not be driven dynamically (at runtime), based on some metadata? – shahkalpesh Mar 5 '10 at 12:07

4 Answers

up vote 29 down vote accepted

I am not aware of any way to achieve this without resorting to reflection. You could write a helper method:

public static MvcHtmlString CustomTextBoxFor<TModel, TProperty>(
    this HtmlHelper<TModel> htmlHelper, 
    Expression<Func<TModel, TProperty>> expression, 
    object htmlAttributes
)
{
    var member = expression.Body as MemberExpression;
    var stringLength = member.Member
        .GetCustomAttributes(typeof(StringLengthAttribute), false)
        .FirstOrDefault() as StringLengthAttribute;

    var attributes = (IDictionary<string, object>)new RouteValueDictionary(htmlAttributes);
    if (stringLength != null)
    {
        attributes.Add("maxlength", stringLength.MaximumLength);
    }
    return htmlHelper.TextBoxFor(expression, attributes);
}

which you could use like this:

<%= Html.CustomTextBoxFor(model => model.Address1, new { @class = "text long" })%>
share|improve this answer
I'm getting Error 1 'System.Web.Mvc.HtmlHelper<TModel>' does not contain a definition for 'TextBoxFor' and no extension method 'TextBoxFor' accepting a first argument of type 'System.Web.Mvc.HtmlHelper<TModel>' could be found (are you missing a using directive or an assembly reference?) at this line: return htmlHelper.TextBoxFor<TModel>(expression, attributes); – sabbour May 12 '10 at 14:16
1  
using System.Web.Mvc.Html? – Darin Dimitrov May 12 '10 at 14:59
1  
Yeah I figured that out already :) I have another problem though, my data annotations are defined on MetaData classes rather than the Model itself. The reflection is not picking them up! – sabbour May 12 '10 at 15:35

If you're using unobtrusive validation, you can handle this client side as well:

$(document).ready(function ()
{
    $("input[data-val-length-max]").each(function ()
    {
        var $this = $(this);
        var data = $this.data();
        $this.attr("maxlength", data.valLengthMax);
    });
});
share|improve this answer
Whilst your approach would give me validation - I was really after putting the maxlength attribute on the input because it would prevent the user from putting in more characters in the browser and would work irrespective of whether javascript was running in the browser. – Pervez Choudhury Apr 8 '12 at 22:33
3  
That's exactly what this does. It uses the data max length validation attribute to set the input maxlenth attribute. – jrummell Apr 9 '12 at 12:30
3  
I was really excited by the first reflection answer, but this looks to achieve the same results without any complex server code. Good job. You should get more votes. – Brian White Jun 29 '12 at 14:10
+1 Great idea for Ajaxed forms. I agree with Brian White that this answer deserves more votes. – Waleed Eissa Jul 13 '12 at 14:21
I missed the part about the OP needing validation without javascript. But I'm glad this has helped others looking for a javascript solution. – jrummell Jul 13 '12 at 14:44

I use the CustomModelMetaDataProvider to achieve this

Step 1. Add New CustomModelMetadataProvider class

public class CustomModelMetadataProvider : DataAnnotationsModelMetadataProvider
{   
    protected override ModelMetadata CreateMetadata(
        IEnumerable<Attribute> attributes,
        Type containerType,
        Func<object> modelAccessor,
        Type modelType,
        string propertyName)
    {
        ModelMetadata metadata = base.CreateMetadata(attributes,
            containerType,
            modelAccessor,
            modelType,
            propertyName);

        //Add MaximumLength to metadata.AdditionalValues collection
        var stringLengthAttribute = attributes.OfType<StringLengthAttribute>().FirstOrDefault();
        if (stringLengthAttribute != null)
            metadata.AdditionalValues.Add("MaxLength", stringLengthAttribute.MaximumLength);

        return metadata;
    }
}

Step 2. In Global.asax Register the CustomModelMetadataProvider

protected void Application_Start()
{
    AreaRegistration.RegisterAllAreas();
    RegisterRoutes(RouteTable.Routes);
    ModelMetadataProviders.Current = new CustomModelMetadataProvider();
}

Step 3. In Views/Shared/EditorTemplates Add a partial view called String.ascx

<%@ Control Language="C#" Inherits="System.Web.Mvc.ViewUserControl" %>
<%if (!ViewData.ModelMetadata.AdditionalValues.ContainsKey("MaxLength")) { %>
    <%: Html.TextBox("", ViewData.TemplateInfo.FormattedModelValue,  new { @class = "text-box single-line" }) %>
<% } else {
    int maxLength = (int)ViewData.ModelMetadata.AdditionalValues["MaxLength"];
    %>
    <%: Html.TextBox("", ViewData.TemplateInfo.FormattedModelValue, new { @class = "text-box single-line", MaxLength = maxLength  })%>
<% } %>

Done...

Edit. The Step 3 can start to get ugly if you want to add more stuff to the textbox. If this is your case you can do the following:

<%@ Control Language="C#" Inherits="System.Web.Mvc.ViewUserControl" %>
<%
    IDictionary<string, object> Attributes = new Dictionary<string, object>();
    if (ViewData.ModelMetadata.AdditionalValues.ContainsKey("MaxLength")) {
        Attributes.Add("MaxLength", (int)ViewData.ModelMetadata.AdditionalValues["MaxLength"]);
    }
    if (ViewData.ContainsKey("style")) {
        Attributes.Add("style", (string)ViewData["style"]);
    }
    if (ViewData.ContainsKey("title")) {
        Attributes.Add("title", (string)ViewData["title"]);
    }
%>
<%: Html.TextBox("", ViewData.TemplateInfo.FormattedModelValue, Attributes)%>
share|improve this answer

If you want this to work with a metadata class you need to use the following code. I know its not pretty but it gets the job done and prevents you from having to write your maxlength properties in both the Entity class and the View:

public static MvcHtmlString TextBoxFor2<TModel, TProperty>
(
  this HtmlHelper<TModel> htmlHelper,
  Expression<Func<TModel, TProperty>> expression,
  object htmlAttributes = null
)
{
  var member = expression.Body as MemberExpression;

  MetadataTypeAttribute metadataTypeAttr = member.Member.ReflectedType
    .GetCustomAttributes(typeof(MetadataTypeAttribute), false)
    .FirstOrDefault() as MetadataTypeAttribute;

  IDictionary<string, object> htmlAttr = null;

  if(metadataTypeAttr != null)
  {
    var stringLength = metadataTypeAttr.MetadataClassType
      .GetProperty(member.Member.Name)
      .GetCustomAttributes(typeof(StringLengthAttribute), false)
      .FirstOrDefault() as StringLengthAttribute;

    if (stringLength != null)
    {
      htmlAttr = new RouteValueDictionary(htmlAttributes);
      htmlAttr.Add("maxlength", stringLength.MaximumLength);
    }                                    
  }

  return htmlHelper.TextBoxFor(expression, htmlAttr);
}

Example class:

[MetadataType(typeof(Person.Metadata))]
public partial class Person
{
  public sealed class Metadata
  {

    [DisplayName("First Name")]
    [StringLength(30, ErrorMessage = "Field [First Name] cannot exceed 30 characters")]
    [Required(ErrorMessage = "Field [First Name] is required")]
    public object FirstName { get; set; }

    /* ... */
  }
}
share|improve this answer

protected by Will Nov 18 '10 at 15:40

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