2

I am having a little trouble figuring how to do this.

here's my scenario

A User must create a IncomeDeclaration for his Business.

But an IncomeDeclaration includes many ActivityIncomeDeclarations for each Activity that his business is on.

I would like my form to include the fields for the new IncomeDeclaration as well as the fields for the ActivityIncomeDeclarations (which will be obviously related to that IncomeDeclaration)....

I know that rubyonrails has a method called "accepts_nested_attributes_for" tgat would probably help me here..

Please help!

2
  • Do you mean it inherits?
    – Aliostad
    Feb 22, 2011 at 19:25
  • no.. A License has_many Activities... A License has_many (IncomeDeclarations.. yearly basis).. each IncomeDeclaration will have many Activities as well because the Contributor must give specific details for each Activity when hes declaring
    – nacho10f
    Feb 22, 2011 at 19:31

2 Answers 2

1

This is very easy to achieve. ASP NET MVC is very compositional and you can use templates to achieve this but inheritance is not the way to go.

so solution is for IncomeDeclaration to contain a list of ActivityIncomeDeclarations and then do this:

for(int  i=0; i< Model.Activities.Count; i++)
{
    Html.EditorFor(Model.Activities[i]);  // you need an editor template (and a display template)  for ActivityIncomeDeclarations
}

More info:

http://www.asp.net/mvc/videos/mvc2-template-customization http://www.dalsoft.co.uk/blog/index.php/2010/04/26/mvc-2-templates/

2
  • Well. This is fine for displaying existing IncomeDeclaration activities to edit them. But what if the user decides to delete one of those or add a few new ones?Of course it's possible if you know how to do it, but it's definitely not trivial any more. Feb 22, 2011 at 19:32
  • I have one question though... how will the Create Action know to save all this data??.. right now my Create action is just receiving two parameters, int LicenseId and IncomeDeclaration income.. Im not sure if saving the IncomeDeclaration will also save all those ActivityIncomeDeclarations
    – nacho10f
    Feb 22, 2011 at 19:37
1

This blog post of mine can help you lots:

Asp.net MVC model binding to List<T>

But basically you will provide fields for your IncomeDeclaration and then dynamically add ActivityIncomeDeclaration fields as needed.

If you want to actually serialize the form you will have to follow instruction provided in the upper blog post.

But there's the second choice as well if you use jQuery. You could manipulate a complex JavaScript object that would be a copy of the same server side C# class like:

var incDec = {
    Name: ""
    // and other properties
    ActivityIncomeDeclarations: []
};

Then while user would be adding those ActivityIncomeDeclarations you'd always simply call

incDec.ActivityIncomeDeclarations.push({
    // properties
});

Then my other blog post will help you that can convert this object to a Dictionary that jQuery for instance is easily able to process:

Sending complex JSON objects to Asp.net MVC using jQuery

By using the prlogin the blog post you could then just easily do:

$.ajax({
    url: "someURL",
    type: "POST",
    data: $.toDictionary(incDec),
    success: function(data, status, xhr){
        // process success
    },
    error: function(xhr, status, err){
        // process error
    }
});

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