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Have just started playing with ASP.NET MVC and have stumbled over the following situation. It feels a lot like a bug but if its not, an explanation would be appreciated :)

The View contains pretty basic stuff

<%=Html.DropDownList("MyList", ViewData["MyListItems"] as SelectList)%>
<%=Html.TextBox("MyTextBox")%>

When not using a model, the value and selected item are set as expected:

//works fine
public ActionResult MyAction(){
  ViewData["MyListItems"] = new SelectList(items, "Value", "Text"); //items is an ienumerable of {Value="XXX", Text="YYY"}

  ViewData["MyList"] = "XXX"; //set the selected item to be the one with value 'XXX'
  ViewData["MyTextBox"] = "ABC"; //sets textbox value to 'ABC'

  return View();
}

But when trying to load via a model, the textbox has the value set as expected, but the dropdown doesnt get a selected item set.

//doesnt work
public ActionResult MyAction(){
  ViewData["MyListItems"] = new SelectList(items, "Value", "Text"); //items is an ienumerable of {Value="XXX", Text="YYY"}

  var model = new {
    MyList = "XXX", //set the selected item to be the one with value 'XXX'
    MyTextBox = "ABC" //sets textbox value to 'ABC'
  }

  return View(model);
}

Any ideas? My current thoughts on it are that perhaps when using a model, we're restricted to setting the selected item on the SelectList constructor instead of using the viewdata (which works fine) and passing the selectlist in with the model - which would have the benefit of cleaning the code up a little - I'm just wondering why this method doesnt work....

Many thanks for any suggestions

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5 Answers

vote up 3 vote down check

After a bunch of hemming and hawing it boils down to the following line of code

if (ViewData.ModelState.TryGetValue(key, out modelState))

which means MVC is trying to resolve the value by only looking at the ViewData Dictionary<> object and not traversing down into the ViewData.Model object.

Whether that's a bug, limitation or design decision I'm not sure. However, you can fix it the following way:

<%= Html.TextBox("MyTextBox", ViewData.Model.MyTextBox) %>
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Thanks for the suggestion Todd, As I mentioned in the post, if using a model you can get around it with: var model{ MyList = new SelectList(items, "Value", "Text", selected_value) } and just: <%=Html.DropDownList("MyList")%> – chrisb Dec 24 '08 at 11:25
Its mainly just the behaviour that was puzzling me - least you've given me a start now - think I need to figure out the whole ModelState flow - if its coming out of there then there must be a step that loads stuff from ViewData etc – chrisb Dec 24 '08 at 11:27
vote up -2 vote down

I think I've seen this before. try:

return View(model, ViewData);

never mind. was thinking of something else. This obviously doesn't compile

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That's the same as return View(model) – Todd Smith Dec 23 '08 at 23:18
yeah. actually this doesn't compile. i was thinking of some other case where I had to pass viewdata in addition to the model. – Trevor de Koekkoek Dec 23 '08 at 23:23
@Trevor: You can just delete this answer if it is wrong. – sth Oct 28 at 6:49
vote up 1 vote down

try setting the selected value in the controller action when creating the SelectList collection.

ViewData["AddressTypeId"] = new SelectList(CustomerService.AddressType_List(), "AddressTypeId", "Name", myItem.AddressTypeId);

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This solved the problem for me when trying to have a selected value for a dropdownlist's items. Thank you! – pcampbell Jul 17 at 22:47
vote up 0 vote down

Ok I may be missing something from this thread however in C# the following works:

Html.DropDownList("ProfessionGuid", (SelectList)ViewData["Professions"])

Where 'ProfessionGuid' is the value to be selected in the list.

In VB.Net I believe it would be:

Html.DropDownList("ProfessionGuid", ViewData["Professions"] AS SelectList)
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vote up 1 vote down

Actually, you just have to pass in null for the Html.DropDownList().
I was having the same exact problem, and used the Reflector to look at the MVC Source Code.

In the System.Web.Mvc.Extensions.SelectExtensions class's SelectInternal() method, it checks whether the selectList parameter is null or not. If it is passed in as null, it looks up the SelectList properly.

Here is the "Code-behind".

ViewData["MyDropDown"] = new SelectList(selectListItems,
                             "Value",
                             "Text",
                             selectedValue.ToString()
                         );

Here is the HTML view code.

<%= Html.DropDownList("MyDropDown", null,
        "** Please Select **",
        new { @class = "my-select-css-class" }
    ) %>

Hope this helps,
Soe

Note: I'm using ASP.NET MVC 2.0 (Beta Version).

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