8

I'm trying to pass dynamic results to View from Controller, method ShowColor returns dynamic results. In View I try to loop through the collection but I'm getting error

'object' does not contain a definition for 'ColorID'.

I have the following code in Controller and View

public class myColor
{
    public int ID { get; set; }
    public string  Name { get; set; }
    public string Like { get; set; }
}

public dynamic ShowColor()
{
    IList<myColor> color = new List<myColor>();
    color.Add(new myColor { ID = 1, Name = "Red", Like = "***" });
    color.Add(new myColor { ID = 2, Name = "Green", Like = "*****" });
    color.Add(new myColor { ID = 3, Name = "Blue", Like = "**" });
    color.Add(new myColor { ID = 4, Name = "Yellow", Like = "*" });

    var select = (from c in color
                  select new
                  {                     
                      ColorID = c.ID,
                      ColorName = c.Name
                  }).ToList();

    return select;
}
public ActionResult DBDynamic()
{
    return View(ShowColor());
}

View

@model dynamic

@{
    ViewBag.Title = "DBDynamic";
}

<h2>DBDynamic</h2>

<p>
    <ul>
        @foreach (var m in Model)
        {
            <li> @m.ColorID</li>            
        }
    </ul>

</p>

Error

Debug Image

Found the solution here and a nice blog here:

public static ExpandoObject ToExpando(this object anonymousObject)
{
    IDictionary<string, object> expando = new ExpandoObject();
    foreach (PropertyDescriptor propertyDescriptor in TypeDescriptor.GetProperties(anonymousObject))
    {
        var obj = propertyDescriptor.GetValue(anonymousObject);
        expando.Add(propertyDescriptor.Name, obj);
    }

    return (ExpandoObject)expando;
}

And call it like this

    var select = (from c in color
                select new
                {
                    ColorID = c.ID,
                    ColorName = c.Name
                })
                .AsEnumerable()
                .Select(x => x.ToExpando());

return View(select);
6
  • Put a break point in your razor view and see what your result is. Dec 8, 2014 at 18:33
  • I added a debug image at bottom of post.
    – sairfan
    Dec 8, 2014 at 18:56
  • have you got this problem resolved? just encountered the similar issue, see if you have any idea.
    – Haobo
    Aug 9, 2016 at 5:11
  • I finally got my problem solved, but the difference between our scenarios is you are using anonymous class in some Linq Express while I'm using JSON objects
    – Haobo
    Aug 9, 2016 at 7:58
  • Yes, I also reached the same solution, I believe best approach is to avoid dynamic type in Model rather use ViewModel, but in some scenarios JSON result can be useful.
    – sairfan
    Aug 10, 2016 at 14:40

1 Answer 1

6

An anonymous object is not the same thing as a dynamic. If you want to use it like a dynamic then cast it to that:

@foreach (dynamic m in Model)

However, dynamics are best avoided if at all possible. You lose all compile-time checking and even intellisense. You won't know if you fat-fingered a property name until runtime or even if you've accidentally used the wrong type of thing the wrong way until runtime. If something is broken, you want to know about it at compile-time, not when it's already live and affecting users, when you may not even know that an error has occurred unless a user notifies you. That's a horrible situation for your app to be in.

Long and short, use strong types. If you want something with properties, ColorID and ColorName, create a view model with those properties and select your query into instances of that type. Then, everything will be nice and strongly-typed and you'll know well in advance if there's some error or problem with your code.

5
  • getting same error message.
    – sairfan
    Dec 8, 2014 at 21:44
  • perhaps the problem is that your model itself is dynamic. Change it to List<object> or IEnumerable<object> and see what happens. Dec 8, 2014 at 21:46
  • IEnumerable<object>, List<object> do not work, same error report
    – sairfan
    Dec 9, 2014 at 15:27
  • "dynamics are best avoided" is not true. When you use dynamics you want to use variables at runtime so compile time checking is not needed. You want to create objects on-the-fly. You create strong types if you want to use those multiple times. Best said with dynamics you want to mimic Javascript behavior and sometimes that can be good. Jul 5, 2017 at 8:12
  • @HermanVanDerBlom: Dynamics are easier sure, but as with most things in life, that ease is a tradeoff. Here, you're introducing a potential vector for errors in your application. If you're doing something like ViewBag.Title = "Foo", it's highly unlikely you'll mess that up, so you're probably fine. However, the more complex you go, the more chance something will break. Runtime errors are the bane of a successful app. Jul 5, 2017 at 12:48

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