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I understand that Html.EditorFor is the best practice for creating form fields, but I'm really annoyed that I cannot add html attributes to it.

I understand the reason for that, but I just cannot imagine form fields without css class declarations. Is it really the formal best practice to use EditorFor, or should I use TextBoxFor, or even plain HTML element, for defining additional html attributes?

In addition, since I'm planning to handle all form elements using client-side scripts, I don't really need any special server-side functionality, so I'm having a hard time figuring out what advantages do I get from using EditorFor / TextBoxFor.

What do you think about that?

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you can use templated helpers for Html.EditorFor which really is the only reason to use it in the first place.

here's an mvc2 article, but it's the same in mvc3.

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  • So if I don't want to start messing with custom template, is there any added value in EditorFor?
    – ml123
    Sep 27, 2011 at 22:35
  • Sure if you don't care about attributes or assign them after :) Sep 27, 2011 at 22:46

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