13

I can't find or figure out how to take a list of items (cupcakes) and display them in razor with a quantity field.

What is happening is I am not able to get the values for each cupcake quantity in the list. Can you do textbox arrays in Razor?

VIEW

<div class="form-group">
    <label>Cupcakes</label>
    @foreach (var cupcake in Model.CupcakeList)
    {
        @Html.TextBox("CupcakeQuantities", cupcake.Id)  @cupcake.Name <br/>
    }
</div>

MODEL

public List<Cupcake> CupcakeList { get; set; }
public List<int> CupcakeQuantities { get; set; }

CONTROLLER

public ActionResult Create()
{
    var model = new PartyBookingModel()
    {
        CupcakeList = db.Cupcakes.ToList(),
        CupcakeQuantities = new List<int>()
    };

    return View(model);
}

CUPCAKE (ENTITY)

public class Cupcake
{
    public int Id { get; set; }
    public string Name { get; set; }
    public decimal PerDozen { get; set; }
}
2
  • Your question seems to be inconsistent, you're showing CupcakeQuantites in your model, but in controller you're filling CupcakeSelection array. Could you please specify where is your quantity field located? Jun 10, 2014 at 21:10
  • Sorry, typo. Should be the CupcakeQuantities. Question updated.
    – devfunkd
    Jun 10, 2014 at 21:15

2 Answers 2

39

You have to use an index, rather than foreach for it to work.

@for (int i = 0; i < Model.CupcakeList.Count; i++)
{
    @Html.TextBoxFor(x=>Model.CupcakeQuantities[i]) @Model.CupcakeList[i].Name <br/>
}

This will create sequentially named+number entries that will be recombined back into the model on post back.

I realise this may seem like "why doesn't foreach work?", but with foreach there is not enough reflected information available to TextBoxFor (as it is just a single object), whereas the array index is extracted by reflection from the Model.CupcakeQuantities[i] expression.

The receiving controller method should take the same as the model passed to the view:

e.g.

[HttpPost]
public ActionResult(PartyBookingModel model)
7
  • Yes, that is what I was trying to figure out. But I don't know how to "capture" the values on post in the controller. Can your answer show that please?
    – devfunkd
    Jun 10, 2014 at 21:17
  • Added example of receiving controller method. When you use the scaffolding wizards for EF models + create, you will usually get a good example to build on. Jun 10, 2014 at 22:08
  • Just realised I have put the wrong model property in the array... Now fixed to be your quantities :) It would be cleaner if the CupCake model contained a quantity property, rather than have 2 lists. e.g. adding a CupCakeCreate model that derives from CupCake and adds a Qty property is one option. Jun 10, 2014 at 22:13
  • I am not sure how to implement a CupCakeCreate model into the current model/view/controller. Your thought makes sense but I am a bit of a noob on this :)
    – devfunkd
    Jun 10, 2014 at 22:34
  • 1
    Yes my bad. Typed all that from memory. Add basic .Count :) Jun 10, 2014 at 22:46
2

Try it this way:

view:

@for (int i = 0; i < Model.Count; i++)
{
    @Html.HiddenFor(x=>Model[i].Id) @Model[i].Name  
    @Html.TextBoxFor(x => Model[i].Quantity) <br/>
}

model:

public class CupcakeViewModel
{
   public int Id {get;set;}
   public string Name {get;set;}
   public int Quantity {get;set;}   
}

controller:

public ActionResult Create()
{
    var model = db.Cupcakes.Select(c => new CupcakeViewModel {
                                                Id = c.Id,
                                                Name = c.Name,
                                                Quantity = 0 
                           })
                           .ToList();

    return View(model);
}

[HttpPost]
public ActionResult Create(CupcakeViewModel[] cakes)
{
     //Save choosen cakes
}
6
  • I am getting textboxes with "ProjectTest.Domain.Cupcake" text inside of them.
    – devfunkd
    Jun 10, 2014 at 21:23
  • @Html.TextBoxFor(x=>Model.CupcakeList[i].Id) puts the Id in the value of the textbox, I need it to be empty as the user is entering in how many of each they want. I changed it to @Html.TextBoxFor(x=>Model.CupcakeList[i].Id, null) but it won't let me assign an int (Id) to a string. :(
    – devfunkd
    Jun 10, 2014 at 21:36
  • Which property do you want to allow user to change? If it's Id - why is it should be empty? for geting it empty you should pass object with Value = "" like this: @Html.TextBoxFor(x=>Model.CupcakeList[i].Id, new { Value = "" }) Jun 10, 2014 at 21:49
  • The way I am trying to make the form is 1) Call database, get list of cupcakes 2) display cupcakes with qty field for user to enter how many of each they want 3) Get values and build a order from each qty.
    – devfunkd
    Jun 10, 2014 at 22:12
  • Thanks, actually I copied your code as template ))) Jun 11, 2014 at 7:30

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