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I'm trying to use the Html.DropDownList extension method but can't figure out how to use it with an enumeration.

Let's say I have an enumeration like this:

public enum ItemTypes
{
    Movie = 1,
    Game = 2,
    Book = 3
}

How do I go about creating a dropdown with these values using the Html.DropDownList extension method? Or is my best bet to simply create a for loop and create the html elements manually?

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21 Answers

up vote 242 down vote accepted

I rolled Rune's answer into an extension method:

public static SelectList ToSelectList<TEnum>(this TEnum enumObj)
{
  var values = from TEnum e in Enum.GetValues(typeof(TEnum))
               select new { Id = e, Name = e.ToString() };

  return new SelectList(values, "Id", "Name", enumObj);
}

This allows you to write:

ViewData["taskStatus"] = task.Status.ToSelectList();
share|improve this answer
8  
I couldnt get it worked, could you please help. When i do Post.PostType.ToSelectList(); it doesnt recognise the extension ? – Barbaros Alp Dec 18 '09 at 13:41
1  
I could not get this to work either. Is Status your Enum Property on the task class? Isn't this one of the enumerated values? – Daryl Jul 5 '10 at 15:42
1  
One caveat: because the extension method does not have any constraints, it will extend every type. This is unavoidable because you do not know what the enum types are and you couldn't constrain on them anyway (I believe). So you will find that int, for example, now has ToSelectList method. I made the same mistake and think, for that reason, it is better as an Html extension. – Rob Kent Apr 19 '11 at 18:56
1  
You can restrict it a little bit with: where T : struct, IConvertible See: stackoverflow.com/questions/79126/… – Richard May 17 '11 at 15:29
2  
This is cool. If anyone is struggling w/ implementation here's how I did it. Added an EnumHelpers class to the HtmlHelpers folder. Used the above code. Added the namespace per @TodK recommendation: <add namespace="xxx.HtmlHelpers" />. Then I used it in a razor page like such: @Html.DropDownListFor(model => model.Status, @Model.Status.ToSelectList()) HTH – Jeff Borden Jul 25 '12 at 19:28
show 7 more comments

I know I'm late to the party on this, but thought you might find this variant useful, as this one also allows you to use descriptive strings rather than enumeration constants in the drop down. To do this, decorate each enumeration entry with a [System.ComponentModel.Description] attribute.

For example:

public enum TestEnum
{
  [Description("Full test")]
  FullTest,

  [Description("Incomplete or partial test")]
  PartialTest,

  [Description("No test performed")]
  None
}

Here is my code:

 private static Type GetNonNullableModelType(ModelMetadata modelMetadata)
    {
        Type realModelType = modelMetadata.ModelType;

        Type underlyingType = Nullable.GetUnderlyingType(realModelType);
        if (underlyingType != null)
        {
            realModelType = underlyingType;
        }
        return realModelType;
    }

    private static readonly SelectListItem[] SingleEmptyItem = new[] { new SelectListItem { Text = "", Value = "" } };

    public static string GetEnumDescription<TEnum>(TEnum value)
    {
        FieldInfo fi = value.GetType().GetField(value.ToString());

        DescriptionAttribute[] attributes = (DescriptionAttribute[])fi.GetCustomAttributes(typeof(DescriptionAttribute), false);

        if ((attributes != null) && (attributes.Length > 0))
            return attributes[0].Description;
        else
            return value.ToString();
    }

    public static MvcHtmlString EnumDropDownListFor<TModel, TEnum>(this HtmlHelper<TModel> htmlHelper, Expression<Func<TModel, TEnum>> expression)
    {
        return EnumDropDownListFor(htmlHelper, expression, null);
    }

    public static MvcHtmlString EnumDropDownListFor<TModel, TEnum>(this HtmlHelper<TModel> htmlHelper, Expression<Func<TModel, TEnum>> expression, object htmlAttributes)
    {
        ModelMetadata metadata = ModelMetadata.FromLambdaExpression(expression, htmlHelper.ViewData);
        Type enumType = GetNonNullableModelType(metadata);
        IEnumerable<TEnum> values = Enum.GetValues(enumType).Cast<TEnum>();

        IEnumerable<SelectListItem> items = from value in values
            select new SelectListItem
            {
                Text = GetEnumDescription(value),
                Value = value.ToString(),
                Selected = value.Equals(metadata.Model)
            };

        // If the enum is nullable, add an 'empty' item to the collection
        if (metadata.IsNullableValueType)
            items = SingleEmptyItem.Concat(items);

        return htmlHelper.DropDownListFor(expression, items, htmlAttributes);
    }

You can then do this in your view:

<%: Html.EnumDropDownListFor(model => model.MyEnumProperty) %>

Hope this helps you!

[Update - just noticed this, and the code looks like an extended version of the code here: http://blogs.msdn.com/b/stuartleeks/archive/2010/05/21/asp-net-mvc-creating-a-dropdownlist-helper-for-enums.aspx, with a couple of additions. If so, attribution would seem fair ;-)]

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11  
+1 I found this most useful of all the answers here. I was able to turn this in to a highly reusable piece of code. Thank you! – Ed Charbeneau Jul 19 '11 at 14:23
4  
How is this not the accepted answer? This is by far the best solution! – aBetterGamer Sep 21 '11 at 19:16
1  
@aBetterGamer Because it was posted 2,5 years after the question :) – Oskar Kjellin Sep 29 '11 at 13:02
17  
Visual Studio has a strange bug where if you don't reference System.Web.Mvc.Html then it says that DropDownListFor can't be found, but neither can it resolve it. You have to manually do using System.Web.Mvc.Html;. Just so y'know. – Kieran Senior Oct 27 '11 at 13:29
1  
I have a variant of this in a gist which we use in all of our projects: gist.github.com/1287511 – subkamran Jan 9 '12 at 18:45
show 9 more comments

I bumped into the same problem, found this question, and thought that the solution provided by Ash wasn't what I was looking for; Having to create the HTML myself means less flexibility compared to the built-in Html.DropDownList() function.

Turns out C#3 etc. makes this pretty easy. I have an Enum called TaskStatus:

var statuses = from TaskStatus s in Enum.GetValues(typeof(TaskStatus))
               select new { ID = s, Name = s.ToString() };
ViewData["taskStatus"] = new SelectList(statuses, "ID", "Name", task.Status);

This creates a good ol' SelectList that can be used like you're used to in the view:

<td><b>Status:</b></td><td><%=Html.DropDownList("taskStatus")%></td></tr>

The anonymous type and LINQ makes this so much more elegant IMHO. No offence intended, Ash. :)

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good answer! i was hoping someone would use linq and the SelectList :) Glad i checked here first! – Pure.Krome Mar 22 '09 at 2:50
1  
ID = s give me the DataTextField not the value ? What might be the reason ? Thank you – Barbaros Alp Dec 18 '09 at 19:09
Rune, I used this same method and the DropDownList DOES render yet when it posts to the server, it doesn't save the value I had selected. – Keith Nov 23 '11 at 17:31
1  
@BarbarosAlp For ID to be a number you'll need to cast the enum to an int: select new { ID = (int)s, Name = s.ToString() }; – Keith Dec 1 '11 at 20:05

Html.DropDownListFor only requires an IEnumerable, so an alternative to Prise's solution is as follows. This will allow you to simply write:

@Html.DropDownListFor(m => m.SelectedItemType, Model.SelectedItemType.ToSelectList())

[Where SelectedItemType is a field on your model of type ItemTypes, and your model is non-null]

Also, you don't really need to genericize the extension method as you can use enumValue.GetType() rather than typeof(T).

EDIT: Integrated Simon's solution here as well, and included ToDescription extension method.

public static class EnumExtensions
{
    public static IEnumerable<SelectListItem> ToSelectList(this Enum enumValue)
    {
        return from Enum e in Enum.GetValues(enumValue.GetType())
               select new SelectListItem
               {
                   Selected = e.Equals(enumValue),
                   Text = e.ToDescription(),
                   Value = e.ToString()
               };
    }

    public static string ToDescription(this Enum value)
    {
        var attributes = (DescriptionAttribute[])value.GetType().GetField(value.ToString()).GetCustomAttributes(typeof(DescriptionAttribute), false);
        return attributes.Length > 0 ? attributes[0].Description : value.ToString();
    }
}
share|improve this answer
1  
Thanks! Was useful for me – Evgeniy Labunskiy Feb 28 '12 at 20:10
Doesn't work for me ('System.NullReferenceException: Object reference not set to an instance of an object.')... My 'Model' is null... probably has something to do with 'GetNonNullableModelType' which Simon has it included – Cristi Mar 24 '12 at 20:31
@Cristi, you are right this solution is not intended to be used in a condition where your Model is null. I try to avoid such a design in general and initialize to an "Empty" model when that's the case. – Zaid Masud Mar 26 '12 at 9:43
Well, I am new to asp mvc, but i have quite experience in .Net . Thank you, I will look into that you were suggesting. Btw your ToDescription extension is far outside of 'Enum' scope. I guess goes well for the 'Object' itself. This is what I used when I took Simon's code and cleaned it up a bit more. – Cristi Mar 26 '12 at 20:05
@Cristi it is difficult to understand what you mean by "far outside of 'Enum' scope" but it sounds like you're saying that the ToDescription extension method is not strongly typed to the ItemTypes enum? This is intentional and makes the extension method generically usable by all enums. If you are comparing it to a generic extension method, there are pros and cons of each approach. In particular, if you generecize you cannot make it constrained on enums alone. – Zaid Masud Mar 27 '12 at 11:26
show 2 more comments

Expanding on Prise and Rune's answers, if you'd like to have the value attribute of your select list items map to the integer value of the Enumeration type, rather than the string value, use the following code:

public static SelectList ToSelectList<T, TU>(T enumObj) 
    where T : struct
    where TU : struct
{
    if(!typeof(T).IsEnum) throw new ArgumentException("Enum is required.", "enumObj");

    var values = from T e in Enum.GetValues(typeof(T))
                 select new { 
                    Value = (TU)Convert.ChangeType(e, typeof(TU)),
                    Text = e.ToString() 
                 };

    return new SelectList(values, "Value", "Text", enumObj);
}

Instead of treating each Enumeration value as a TEnum object, we can treat it as a object and then cast it to integer to get the unboxed value.

Note: I also added a generic type constraint to restrict the types for which this extension is available to only structs (Enum's base type), and a run-time type validation which ensures that the struct passed in is indeed an Enum.

Update 10/23/12: Added generic type parameter for underlying type and fixed non-compilation issue affecting .NET 4+.

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Thanks! This was the answer I needed. I'm storing an Enum's integer value as a column in the database and this solution seems to be working perfectly. – grimus Aug 11 '10 at 6:40
but what if you are storing a char and not an int? which is my case. obviously i could change (int) to (char) but how about making this generic as well. how to do that? – Stefanvds Sep 21 '10 at 12:46
@Stefandvds This is a great question in regards to casting to the correct represented type. Based on the tests I just performed it would seem the only way you would be able to achieve this would be by specifying the actual type as another type parameter. ToSelectList<TEnum, TEnumValue>(this TEnum enumObj) { ... } – Nathan Taylor Sep 21 '10 at 13:19
@Stefandvds See this question. – Nathan Taylor Sep 21 '10 at 14:11
2  
Getting error "Cannot convert type 'TEnum' to 'int'". – Joao Leme Jul 24 '12 at 20:42

So without Extension functions if you are looking for simple and easy.. This is what I did

<%= Html.DropDownListFor(x => x.CurrentAddress.State, new SelectList(Enum.GetValues(typeof(XXXXX.Sites.YYYY.Models.State))))%>

where XXXXX.Sites.YYYY.Models.State is an enum

Probably better to do helper function, but when time is short this will get the job done.

share|improve this answer
Nice this worked populating the dropdown but how do you set the default selected value in the Razor syntax for Html.DropDownListFor? I want to show a table with combo boxes of enums and I need to set the selected value as well according to what it was before. – Johncl Sep 23 '11 at 14:20
Should be able to pass a second parameter with the selected value to the new SelectList(IEnumerable,object) function. MSDN Dococumentation: msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/dd460123.aspx – Marty Trenouth Sep 23 '11 at 17:26

To solve the problem of getting the number instead of text using Prise's extension method.

public static SelectList ToSelectList<TEnum>(this TEnum enumObj)
{
  var values = from TEnum e in Enum.GetValues(typeof(TEnum))
               select new { ID = (int)Enum.Parse(typeof(TEnum),e.ToString())
                         , Name = e.ToString() };

  return new SelectList(values, "Id", "Name", enumObj);
}
share|improve this answer

The best solution I found for this was combining this blog with Simon Goldstone's answer.

This allows use of the enum in the model. Essentially the idea is to use an integer property as well as the enum, and emulate the integer property.

Then use the [System.ComponentModel.Description] attribute for annotating the model with your display text, and use an "EnumDropDownListFor" extension in your view.

This makes both the view and model very readable and maintainable.

Model:

public enum YesPartialNoEnum
{
    [Description("Yes")]
    Yes,
    [Description("Still undecided")]
    Partial,
    [Description("No")]
    No
}

//........

[Display(Name = "The label for my dropdown list")]
public virtual Nullable<YesPartialNoEnum> CuriousQuestion{ get; set; }
public virtual Nullable<int> CuriousQuestionId
{
    get { return (Nullable<int>)CuriousQuestion; }
    set { CuriousQuestion = (Nullable<YesPartialNoEnum>)value; }
}

View:

@using MyProject.Extensions
{
//...
    @Html.EnumDropDownListFor(model => model.CuriousQuestion)
//...
}

Extension (directly from Simon Goldstone's answer, included here for completeness):

using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Linq;
using System.Web;
using System.Web.Mvc;
using System.ComponentModel;
using System.Reflection;
using System.Linq.Expressions;
using System.Web.Mvc.Html;

namespace MyProject.Extensions
{
    //Extension methods must be defined in a static class
    public static class MvcExtensions
    {
        private static Type GetNonNullableModelType(ModelMetadata modelMetadata)
        {
            Type realModelType = modelMetadata.ModelType;

            Type underlyingType = Nullable.GetUnderlyingType(realModelType);
            if (underlyingType != null)
            {
                realModelType = underlyingType;
            }
            return realModelType;
        }

        private static readonly SelectListItem[] SingleEmptyItem = new[] { new SelectListItem { Text = "", Value = "" } };

        public static string GetEnumDescription<TEnum>(TEnum value)
        {
            FieldInfo fi = value.GetType().GetField(value.ToString());

            DescriptionAttribute[] attributes = (DescriptionAttribute[])fi.GetCustomAttributes(typeof(DescriptionAttribute), false);

            if ((attributes != null) && (attributes.Length > 0))
                return attributes[0].Description;
            else
                return value.ToString();
        }

        public static MvcHtmlString EnumDropDownListFor<TModel, TEnum>(this HtmlHelper<TModel> htmlHelper, Expression<Func<TModel, TEnum>> expression)
        {
            return EnumDropDownListFor(htmlHelper, expression, null);
        }

        public static MvcHtmlString EnumDropDownListFor<TModel, TEnum>(this HtmlHelper<TModel> htmlHelper, Expression<Func<TModel, TEnum>> expression, object htmlAttributes)
        {
            ModelMetadata metadata = ModelMetadata.FromLambdaExpression(expression, htmlHelper.ViewData);
            Type enumType = GetNonNullableModelType(metadata);
            IEnumerable<TEnum> values = Enum.GetValues(enumType).Cast<TEnum>();

            IEnumerable<SelectListItem> items = from value in values
                                                select new SelectListItem
                                                {
                                                    Text = GetEnumDescription(value),
                                                    Value = value.ToString(),
                                                    Selected = value.Equals(metadata.Model)
                                                };

            // If the enum is nullable, add an 'empty' item to the collection
            if (metadata.IsNullableValueType)
                items = SingleEmptyItem.Concat(items);

            return htmlHelper.DropDownListFor(expression, items, htmlAttributes);
        }
    }
}
share|improve this answer
This doesnt work, MVC 4 Razor. In the view or runtime, error = "The call is ambiguous between the following methods or properties 'LDN.Extensions.MvcExtensions.EnumDropDownListFor<MyModel,LDN.Models.YesPartialN‌​oEnum?>(System.Web.Mvc.HtmlHelper<MyModel>, System.Linq.Expressions.Expression<System.Func<MyModel,LDN.Models.YesPartialNoEn‌​um?>>)' and...." and that exact same method with same props repeated again (not enough chars allowed here). – Marc Sep 14 '12 at 22:41

You want to look at using something like Enum.GetValues

share|improve this answer

This is version for Razor:

@{
    var itemTypesList = new List<SelectListItem>();
    itemTypesList.AddRange(Enum.GetValues(typeof(ItemTypes)).Cast<ItemTypes>().Select(
                (item, index) => new SelectListItem
                {
                    Text = item.ToString(),
                    Value = (index).ToString(),
                    Selected = Model.ItemTypeId == index
                }).ToList());
 }


@Html.DropDownList("ItemTypeId", itemTypesList)
share|improve this answer

I am very late on this one but I just found a really cool way to do this with one line of code, if you are happy to add the Unconstrained Melody NuGet package (a nice, small library from Jon Skeet).

This solution is better because:

  1. It ensures (with generic type constraints) that the value really is an enum value (due to Unconstrained Melody)
  2. It avoids unnecessary boxing (due to Unconstrained Melody)
  3. It caches all the descriptions to avoid using reflection on every call (due to Unconstrained Melody)
  4. It is less code than the other solutions!

So, here are the steps to get this working:

  1. In Package Manager Console, "Install-Package UnconstrainedMelody"
  2. Add a property on your model like so:

    //Replace "YourEnum" with the type of your enum
    public IEnumerable<SelectListItem> AllItems
    {
        get
        {
            return Enums.GetValues<YourEnum>().Select(enumValue => new SelectListItem { Value = enumValue.ToString(), Text = enumValue.GetDescription() });
        }
    }
    

Now that you have the List of SelectListItem exposed on your model, you can use the @Html.DropDownList or @Html.DropDownListFor using this property as the source.

share|improve this answer
+1 for using Jon Skeet's code :), just kidding good one though – Vamsi Krishna Feb 8 at 11:51

Another fix to this extension method - the current version didn't select the enum's current value. I fixed the last line:

public static SelectList ToSelectList<TEnum>(this TEnum enumObj) where TEnum : struct
    {
        if (!typeof(TEnum).IsEnum) throw new ArgumentException("An Enumeration type is required.", "enumObj");

        var values = from TEnum e in Enum.GetValues(typeof(TEnum))
                       select new
                       {
                           ID = (int)Enum.Parse(typeof(TEnum), e.ToString()),
                           Name = e.ToString()
                       };


        return new SelectList(values, "ID", "Name", ((int)Enum.Parse(typeof(TEnum), enumObj.ToString())).ToString());
    }
share|improve this answer

If you want to add localization support just change the s.toString() method to something like this:

ResourceManager rManager = new ResourceManager(typeof(Resources));
var dayTypes = from OperatorCalendarDay.OperatorDayType s in Enum.GetValues(typeof(OperatorCalendarDay.OperatorDayType))
               select new { ID = s, Name = rManager.GetString(s.ToString()) };

In here the typeof(Resources) is the resource you want to load, and then you get the localized String, also useful if your enumerator has values with multiple words.

share|improve this answer

This is my version of helper method. I use this:

var values = from int e in Enum.GetValues(typeof(TEnum))
             select new { ID = e, Name = Enum.GetName(typeof(TEnum), e) };

Instead of that:

var values = from TEnum e in Enum.GetValues(typeof(TEnum))
           select new { ID = (int)Enum.Parse(typeof(TEnum),e.ToString())
                     , Name = e.ToString() };

Here it is:

public static SelectList ToSelectList<TEnum>(this TEnum self) where TEnum : struct
    {
        if (!typeof(TEnum).IsEnum)
        {
            throw new ArgumentException("self must be enum", "self");
        }

        Type t = typeof(TEnum);

        var values = from int e in Enum.GetValues(typeof(TEnum))
                     select new { ID = e, Name = Enum.GetName(typeof(TEnum), e) };

        return new SelectList(values, "ID", "Name", self);
    }
share|improve this answer

This is Rune & Prise answers altered to use the Enum int value as the ID.

Sample Enum:

public enum ItemTypes
{
    Movie = 1,
    Game = 2,
    Book = 3
}

Extension method:

    public static SelectList ToSelectList<TEnum>(this TEnum enumObj)
    {
        var values = from TEnum e in Enum.GetValues(typeof(TEnum))
                     select new { Id = (int)Enum.Parse(typeof(TEnum), e.ToString()), Name = e.ToString() };

        return new SelectList(values, "Id", "Name", (int)Enum.Parse(typeof(TEnum), enumObj.ToString()));
    }

Sample of usage:

 <%=  Html.DropDownList("MyEnumList", ItemTypes.Game.ToSelectList()) %>

Remember to Import the namespace containing the Extension method

<%@ Import Namespace="MyNamespace.LocationOfExtensionMethod" %>

Sample of generated HTML:

<select id="MyEnumList" name="MyEnumList">
    <option value="1">Movie</option>
    <option selected="selected" value="2">Game</option>
    <option value="3">Book </option>
</select>

Note that the item that you use to call the ToSelectList on is the selected item.

share|improve this answer

Here is a better encapsulated solution:

http://www.spicelogic.com/Journal/ASP-NET-MVC-DropDownListFor-Html-Helper-Enum-5

Say here is your model:

enter image description here

Sample Usage:

enter image description here

Generated UI: enter image description here

And generated HTML

enter image description here

The Helper Extension Source Code snap shot:

enter image description here

You can download the sample project from the link I provided.

share|improve this answer

@Simon Goldstone: Thanks for your solution, it can be perfectly applied in my case. The only problem is I had to translate it to VB. But now it is done and to save other people's time (in case they need it) I put it here:

Imports System.Runtime.CompilerServices
Imports System.ComponentModel
Imports System.Linq.Expressions

Public Module HtmlHelpers
    Private Function GetNonNullableModelType(modelMetadata As ModelMetadata) As Type
        Dim realModelType = modelMetadata.ModelType

        Dim underlyingType = Nullable.GetUnderlyingType(realModelType)

        If Not underlyingType Is Nothing Then
            realModelType = underlyingType
        End If

        Return realModelType
    End Function

    Private ReadOnly SingleEmptyItem() As SelectListItem = {New SelectListItem() With {.Text = "", .Value = ""}}

    Private Function GetEnumDescription(Of TEnum)(value As TEnum) As String
        Dim fi = value.GetType().GetField(value.ToString())

        Dim attributes = DirectCast(fi.GetCustomAttributes(GetType(DescriptionAttribute), False), DescriptionAttribute())

        If Not attributes Is Nothing AndAlso attributes.Length > 0 Then
            Return attributes(0).Description
        Else
            Return value.ToString()
        End If
    End Function

    <Extension()>
    Public Function EnumDropDownListFor(Of TModel, TEnum)(ByVal htmlHelper As HtmlHelper(Of TModel), expression As Expression(Of Func(Of TModel, TEnum))) As MvcHtmlString
        Return EnumDropDownListFor(htmlHelper, expression, Nothing)
    End Function

    <Extension()>
    Public Function EnumDropDownListFor(Of TModel, TEnum)(ByVal htmlHelper As HtmlHelper(Of TModel), expression As Expression(Of Func(Of TModel, TEnum)), htmlAttributes As Object) As MvcHtmlString
        Dim metaData As ModelMetadata = ModelMetadata.FromLambdaExpression(expression, htmlHelper.ViewData)
        Dim enumType As Type = GetNonNullableModelType(metaData)
        Dim values As IEnumerable(Of TEnum) = [Enum].GetValues(enumType).Cast(Of TEnum)()

        Dim items As IEnumerable(Of SelectListItem) = From value In values
            Select New SelectListItem With
            {
                .Text = GetEnumDescription(value),
                .Value = value.ToString(),
                .Selected = value.Equals(metaData.Model)
            }

        ' If the enum is nullable, add an 'empty' item to the collection
        If metaData.IsNullableValueType Then
            items = SingleEmptyItem.Concat(items)
        End If

        Return htmlHelper.DropDownListFor(expression, items, htmlAttributes)
    End Function
End Module

End You use it like this:

@Html.EnumDropDownListFor(Function(model) (model.EnumField))
share|improve this answer

You can also use my custom HtmlHelpers in Griffin.MvcContrib. The following code:

@Html2.CheckBoxesFor(model => model.InputType) <br />
@Html2.RadioButtonsFor(model => model.InputType) <br />
@Html2.DropdownFor(model => model.InputType) <br />

Generates:

enter image description here

https://github.com/jgauffin/griffin.mvccontrib

share|improve this answer

I ended up creating extention methods to do what is essentially the accept answer here. The last half of the Gist deals with Enum specifically.

https://gist.github.com/3813767

share|improve this answer

Building on Simon's answer, a similar approach is to get the Enum values to display from a Resource file, instead of in a description attribute within the Enum itself. This is helpful if your site needs to be rendered in more than one language and if you were to have a specific resource file for Enums, you could go one step further and have just Enum values, in your Enum and reference them from the extension by a convention such as [EnumName]_[EnumValue] - ultimately less typing!

The extension then looks like:

public static IHtmlString EnumDropDownListFor<TModel, TEnum>(this HtmlHelper<TModel> html, Expression<Func<TModel, TEnum>> expression)
{            
    var metadata = ModelMetadata.FromLambdaExpression(expression, html.ViewData);

    var enumType = Nullable.GetUnderlyingType(metadata.ModelType) ?? metadata.ModelType;

    var enumValues = Enum.GetValues(enumType).Cast<object>();

    var items = from enumValue in enumValues                        
                select new SelectListItem
                {
                    Text = GetResourceValueForEnumValue(enumValue),
                    Value = ((int)enumValue).ToString(),
                    Selected = enumValue.Equals(metadata.Model)
                };


    return html.DropDownListFor(expression, items, string.Empty, null);
}

private static string GetResourceValueForEnumValue<TEnum>(TEnum enumValue)
{
    var key = string.Format("{0}_{1}", enumValue.GetType().Name, enumValue);

    return Enums.ResourceManager.GetString(key) ?? enumValue.ToString();
}

Resources in the Enums.Resx file looking like ItemTypes_Movie : Film

One other thing I like to do is, instead of calling the extension method directly, I'd rather call it with a @Html.EditorFor(x => x.MyProperty), or ideally just have the whole form, in one neat @Html.EditorForModel(). To do this I change the string template to look like this

@using MVCProject.Extensions

@{
    var type = Nullable.GetUnderlyingType(ViewData.ModelMetadata.ModelType) ?? ViewData.ModelMetadata.ModelType;

    @(typeof (Enum).IsAssignableFrom(type) ? Html.EnumDropDownListFor(x => x) : Html.TextBoxFor(x => x))
}

If this interests you, I've put a much more detailed answer here on my blog:

http://paulthecyclist.com/2013/05/24/enum-dropdown/

share|improve this answer

UPDATED - I would suggest using the suggestion by Rune below rather than this option!


I assume that you want something like the following spat out:

<select name="blah">
    <option value="1">Movie</option>
    <option value="2">Game</option>
    <option value="3">Book</option>
</select>

which you could do with an extension method something like the following:

public static string DropdownEnum(this System.Web.Mvc.HtmlHelper helper,
                                  Enum values)
{
    System.Text.StringBuilder sb = new System.Text.StringBuilder();
    sb.Append("<select name=\"blah\">");
    string[] names = Enum.GetNames(values.GetType());
    foreach(string name in names)
    {
        sb.Append("<option value=\"");
        sb.Append(((int)Enum.Parse(values.GetType(), name)).ToString());
        sb.Append("\">");
        sb.Append(name);
        sb.Append("</option>");
    }
    sb.Append("</select>");
    return sb.ToString();
}

BUT things like this aren't localisable (i.e. it will be hard to translate into another language).

Note: you need to call the static method with an instance of the Enumeration, i.e. Html.DropdownEnum(ItemTypes.Movie);

There may be a more elegant way of doing this, but the above does work.

share|improve this answer
Thanks. That's actually the implementation I ended up with but I was hoping it was already baked into the framework. I guess not. :-( – Kevin Pang Dec 23 '08 at 22:05
5  
wow. thats fugly. – fregas Oct 9 '09 at 17:06
There was something in MvcContrib for this if i remember correct. – Arnis L. Oct 12 '09 at 9:07
I agree with your update - the solutions posted by Rune & Prise are much neater, leaving the actual markup to be rendered in the view. – belugabob Oct 12 '09 at 10:21

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