vote up 0 vote down star

Am I right to think that there is no way to set the selected value in the C# class SelectList after it is created? Isn't that a bit silly?

flag

68% accept rate

6 Answers

vote up 0 vote down

You mean client-side, in the browser?

var select = document.getElementById('mySelect');
select.options[newIndex].selected = true;
link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

The "SelectedValue" property is read-only. Setting it in the constructor is the only way.

Tor, the SelectList is an ASP.NET MVC construct used to create a drop-down list. Doing it your way should work too, but the SelectList should do it for you (and not in JS) if done properly.

link|flag
Why, for the love of god, is it readonly? And why can't you manipulate the items after instantiation? And why then can it not be exposed as a readonly array? This datatype goes beyond me! – boris callens Nov 19 '08 at 13:54
If you don't like it, write your own version. Its not that complicated, guy. – Will Nov 19 '08 at 13:56
3  
@ will: True, but I don't think I'm the only one with these feelings towards the SelectList class. SHould we all write our own then? – boris callens Feb 2 at 9:10
vote up 0 vote down

I think you can do this in the controller. If you are going to render a drop down list with name/ID StateCode, then you can set the selected state using this code after the SelectList is created:

ViewData["StateCode"] = "VT";

It seems that the drop down list HTML helper looks for a ViewData item with the same name as the drop down list that's being created.

I don't think I like using this technique, but it does seem to work.

I do agree that the SelectList class is a little weak at the moment. I'd like to be able to create a SelectList and then select a value later by either value or text.

link|flag
I noticed that it starts making sence when you use a regular collection in controller and selectlist only at the very last moment in view. Although I don't really like it that way, it does take away a lot of the friction... – boris callens Feb 2 at 9:08
vote up 0 vote down

The SelectList object is readonly after it was created. if you want to select something you better do it like:

<%= Html.DropDownList("clientId", ViewData["clients"] as List<SelectListItem>,)%>

And in the code behind:

    ViewData["clientId"] = "ASD"; //This should be the value of item you want to select
    ViewData["clients"] = clientItemList; //List<SelectListItem>
link|flag
I try to stay away from the code behind because this would distribute code between my controller, my view AND my code behind. What I do now is instantiate the SelectListItem in the view. Not how I prefer it, but that's just how the cookie crumbles. – boris callens Mar 12 at 8:55
vote up 0 vote down

Could do it pretty easy with jQuery;

$(function() {
    $("#myselectlist option[@value='ItemToSelectValue'].attr('selected', 'true');
});
link|flag
The question is actually talking about the C# type SelectList. I'll update the OP to remove the confusion. – boris callens Aug 28 at 7:08
vote up 0 vote down

I needed a dropdown in a editable grid myself with preselected dropdown values. Afaik, the selectlist data is provided by the controller to the view, so it is created before the view consumes it. Once the view consumes the SelectList, I hand it over to a custom helper that uses the standard DropDownList helper. So, a fairly light solution imo. Guess it fits in the ASP.Net MVC spirit at the time of writing; when not happy roll your own...

public static string DropDownListEx(this HtmlHelper helper, string name, SelectList selectList, object selectedValue)
{
    return helper.DropDownList(name, new SelectList(selectList.Items, selectList.DataValueField, selectList.DataTextField, selectedValue));
}
link|flag

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.