You start with two view models. The first one which represents a selected company...
public class CompanySelectViewModel
{
public int CompanyId { get; set; }
public string Name { get; set; }
public bool IsSelected { get; set; }
}
...and the second one for the subscription to create:
public class SubscriptionCreateViewModel
{
public int Amount { get; set; }
public IEnumerable<CompanySelectViewModel> Companies { get; set; }
}
Then in the SubscriptionController
s GET action you load the companies from the database to initialize the view model:
public ActionResult Create()
{
var viewModel = new SubscriptionCreateViewModel
{
Companies = _context.Companies
.Select(c => new CompanySelectViewModel
{
CompanyId = c.CompanyId,
Name = c.Name,
IsSelected = false
})
.ToList()
};
return View(viewModel);
}
Now, you have a strongly typed view for this action:
@model SubscriptionCreateViewModel
@using (Html.BeginForm()) {
@Html.EditorFor(model => model.Amount)
@Html.EditorFor(model => model.Companies)
<input type="submit" value="Create" />
@Html.ActionLink("Cancel", "Index")
}
To get the company checkboxes rendered correctly you introduce an editor template. It must have the name CompanySelectViewModel.cshtml
and goes into the folder Views/Subscription/EditorTemplates
(create such a folder manually if it doesn't exist). It's a strongly typed partial view:
@model CompanySelectViewModel
@Html.HiddenFor(model => model.CompanyId)
@Html.HiddenFor(model => model.Name)
@Html.LabelFor(model => model.IsSelected, Model.Name)
@Html.EditorFor(model => model.IsSelected)
Name
is added as hidden field to preserve the name during a POST.
Obviously you have to style the views a bit more.
Now, your POST action would look like this:
[HttpPost]
public ActionResult Create(SubscriptionCreateViewModel viewModel)
{
if (ModelState.IsValid)
{
var subscription = new Subscription
{
Amount = viewModel.Amount,
Companies = new List<Company>()
};
foreach (var selectedCompany
in viewModel.Companies.Where(c => c.IsSelected))
{
var company = new Company { CompanyId = selectedCompany.CompanyId };
_context.Companies.Attach(company);
subscription.Companies.Add(company);
}
_context.Subscriptions.Add(subscription);
_context.SaveChanges();
return RedirectToAction("Index");
}
return View(viewModel);
}
Instead of using Attach
you can also load the company first with var company = _context.Companies.Find(selectedCompany.CompanyId);
. But with Attach
you don't need a roundtrip to the database to load the companies to be added to the collection.
(Edit 2: In this answer is a continuation for the Edit
actions and views with the same example model.)
Edit
Your model is not really a many-to-many relationship. You have two one-to-many relationships instead. The PublicTransportSubscriptionByCompany
entity is not needed - normally. If you have a composite primary key in that table made of Id_PublicTransportSubscription, Id_PublicTransportCompany
and remove the id column Id_PublicTransportSubscriptionByCompanyId
EF would detect this table schema as a many-to-many relationship and create one collection in each of the entities for subscription and company and it would create no entity for the link table. My code above would apply then.
If you don't want to change the schema for some reason you must change the POST action like so:
[HttpPost]
public ActionResult Create(SubscriptionCreateViewModel viewModel)
{
if (ModelState.IsValid)
{
var subscription = new Subscription
{
Amount = viewModel.Amount,
SubscriptionByCompanies = new List<SubscriptionByCompany>()
};
foreach (var selectedCompany
in viewModel.Companies.Where(c => c.IsSelected))
{
var company = new Company { CompanyId = selectedCompany.CompanyId };
_context.Companies.Attach(company);
var subscriptionByCompany = new SubscriptionByCompany
{
Company = company
};
subscription.SubscriptionByCompanies.Add(subscriptionByCompany);
}
_context.Subscriptions.Add(subscription);
_context.SaveChanges();
return RedirectToAction("Index");
}
return View(viewModel);
}