10

It's a simple question. How did stackoverflow do their menu in Asp.net MVC, with highlight on what page we are on.

0

7 Answers 7

3

There is probably no MVC special magic that makes this happen.

I'm sure:

if( HttpContext.Current.Request.Path == "some some menu url" )

or

if( ViewContext_Or_ControllerContext.RouteData.Values["controller"] == "some value") 

is used someplace.

You could put this code in about three different locations ( View ( .aspx ), ViewModel, Custom HtmlHelper ) and they would all require that same bit of code.

1
  • This will be the basic. I will try to figure out the best way to make this DRY... :P
    – DucDigital
    Jan 12, 2010 at 3:13
3

For the purpose of this, i've writen some code down, there are some part that using my custom extension like Language, go ahead and use it, just ignore the minor part.

This one i place on top of my Partial that contain the menu to get the action and controller, so that i can pass this to the extension.

<%  string currentAction = ViewContext.RouteData.Values["action"].ToString();
    string currentController = ViewContext.RouteData.Values["controller"].ToString(); %>

This is the sidebar Item, basically this will generate a "li" tag with a link and your custom class to indicate whether the link is currently used in the page / highlight.

public static string SidebarItem(this System.Web.Mvc.HtmlHelper html, string currentAction, string currentController, string action, string controller, string languageKey, params object[] args)
{
    TagBuilder tb = new TagBuilder("li");
    if (string.Equals(currentAction, action, StringComparison.OrdinalIgnoreCase) && string.Equals(currentController, controller, StringComparison.OrdinalIgnoreCase))
    {
        tb.GenerateId("activemenu");
    }
    string text = html.Language(languageKey, args);
    string link = html.ActionLink(text, action, controller).ToHtmlString();
    tb.SetInnerText("{0}");
    return String.Format(tb.ToString(), "<span>"+link+"</span>");
}

and here is the actual usage of the code above

<%= Html.SidebarItem(currentAction, currentController, "index", "home", "index") %>
1
1

1.First create extention

public class Extention
{
    public static Dictionary<Menu, Menu> GetDictionary()
    {
        Dictionary<Menu, Menu> urls = new Dictionary<Menu, Menu>();
        urls.Add(new Menu { Controller = "AppHome", Action = "Index" }, new Menu { Controller = "AppHome", Action = "Index" });
        urls.Add(new Menu { Controller = "Home", Action = "Index" }, new Menu { Controller = "Home", Action = "Index" });

        return urls;
    }
}
public static class HtmlExtensions
{
    public static MvcHtmlString ActionMenu(this HtmlHelper helper,String linkText,string actionName,String controllerName)
    {
        var tag= new TagBuilder("li");
        if(helper.ViewContext.RequestContext.IsCurrentRoute(null,controllerName,actionName)||
            helper.ViewContext.RequestContext.IsParentRoute(controllerName,actionName))
        {
            tag.AddCssClass("active");
        }
        else
        {
            tag.AddCssClass("inactive");
        }
        tag.InnerHtml = helper.ActionLink(linkText, actionName, controllerName).ToString();
        return MvcHtmlString.Create(tag.ToString());
    }
}
public static class RequestExtentions
{
    public static bool IsCurrentRoute(this RequestContext context, String areaName)
    {
        return context.IsCurrentRoute(areaName, null, null);
    }
    public static bool IsCurrentRoute(this RequestContext context, String areaName, String controllerName)
    {
        return context.IsCurrentRoute(areaName, controllerName, null);
    }
    public static bool IsCurrentRoute(this RequestContext context, String areaName, String controllerName, params String[] actionNames)
    {
        var routeData = context.RouteData;
        var routeArea = routeData.DataTokens["area"] as String;
        var current = false;

        if (((String.IsNullOrEmpty(routeArea) && String.IsNullOrEmpty(areaName)) || (routeArea == areaName)) &&
             ((String.IsNullOrEmpty(controllerName)) || (routeData.GetRequiredString("controller") == controllerName)) &&
             ((actionNames == null) || actionNames.Contains(routeData.GetRequiredString("action"))))
        {
            current = true;
        }
        return current;
    }
    public static bool IsParentRoute(this RequestContext context, String controller, String action)
    {
        var routeData = context.RouteData;
        Menu returnUrl = null;
        Menu requestUrl = new Menu { Action = routeData.GetRequiredString("action"), Controller = routeData.GetRequiredString("controller") };
        Menu linkUrl = new Menu { Action = action, Controller = controller };

        var urls = Extention.GetDictionary();
        urls.TryGetValue(requestUrl, out returnUrl);

        if (returnUrl != null && returnUrl.Equals(linkUrl))
            return true;
        else
            return false; ;
    }
}
0

See for i.e. this URL

http://stackoverflow.com/questions this indicates that probably the Questions Controller handles this page. So it changes the View to display a highlighted menu item.

2
  • That's the basic idea. I'm guessing there's some paging involved in the Linq to SQL models, among other things. Jan 11, 2010 at 16:52
  • Stack Overflow uses Linq to SQL models? whaaaat?
    – nick
    Jan 15, 2011 at 20:45
0

If you look at the page source, they've added a css class to the <li> element to change the background color. I'm guessing the code looks at what controller the user is accessing (questions, users, etc) and adds the class to that section's <li> tag.

0
0

You could use a HTML Helper to create the menu. That way all the code is in one place.

SiteMap HtmlHelper ASP.NET MVC has some information about a component that is available.

0

The best way - create MVC helper (see previous answers) But if you don't want to do it and want to do quickly - remember about new feature in MVC 4.0 with set attributes of html tags (attribute will be avoid if it's set to null):

        @{
            string currentAction = ViewContext.RouteData.Values["action"].ToString().ToLower();

            string classUpcomingTime = null;
            string classArchive = null;
            string classReporting = null;

            switch (currentAction)
            {
                case "upcomingtime":
                    classUpcomingTime = "active";
                    break;
                case "archive":
                    classArchive = "active";
                    break;
                case "reporting":
                    classReporting = "active";
                    break;
            }

            <ul class="nav navbar-nav">
                <li class="@classUpcomingTime">
                    <a href="/Vacancy/UpcomingTime">Open Vacancies</a>
                </li>
                <li class="@classArchive">
                    <a href="/Vacancy/Archive">Archive</a>

                <li class="@classReporting">
                    @*<a href="#">Reporting</a>*@
                    <a href="/Vacancy/Reporting">Reporting</a>
                </li>
            </ul>
        }

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