Is it possible to invoke a View Component from controller and render it to a string? I am really looking for some code example for this. Any help will be much appreciated.
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What do you mean by view component and when you say a string do you want to render a string in the view or the views component as a string?– IsakBosmanCommented Jan 18, 2015 at 11:52
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View components in mvc 6: asp.net/vnext/overview/aspnet-vnext/vc– eadamCommented Jan 18, 2015 at 11:56
6 Answers
As of beta7 it is now possible to return a ViewComponent directly from a controller. Check the MVC/Razor section of the announcement
The new ViewComponentResult in MVC makes it easy to return the result of a ViewComponent from an action. This allows you to easily expose the logic of a ViewComponent as a standalone endpoint.
So now the code for returning the sample view component just needs to be:
public class HomeController : Controller
{
public IActionResult Index()
{
return ViewComponent("My");
}
}
Please refer to example from official ASP.NET article on ViewComponent
In their example, the view component is called directly from the controller as follows:
public IActionResult IndexVC()
{
return ViewComponent("PriorityList", new { maxPriority = 3, isDone = false });
}
You can do that but you have to apply following thing as It is render by DefaultViewComponentHelper.
You have to create instance of this and to create that you need IViewComponentSelector and IViewComponentInvokerFactory.
To do this I have done following thing.
public class HomeController : Controller
{
Microsoft.AspNet.Mvc.DefaultViewComponentHelper helper = null;
Microsoft.AspNet.Mvc.Razor.RazorView razorView = null;
public HomeController(IViewComponentSelector selector,IViewComponentInvokerFactory factory,IRazorPageFactory razorPageFactory,IRazorPageActivator pageActivator,IViewStartProvider viewStartProvider)
{
helper = new DefaultViewComponentHelper(selector, factory);
razorView = new Microsoft.AspNet.Mvc.Razor.RazorView(razorPageFactory, pageActivator, viewStartProvider);
}
public IActionResult Index()
{
ViewContext context = new ViewContext(ActionContext, razorView, ViewData, null);
helper.Contextualize(context);
string st1 = helper.Invoke("My", null).ToString();
return View();
}
}
Here is my sample View Component.
public class MyViewComponent : ViewComponent
{
public MyViewComponent()
{
}
public IViewComponentResult Invoke()
{
return Content("This is test");
}
}
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This doesn't work with latest bits. Try this: gist.github.com/pauldotknopf/b424e9b8b03d31d67f3cce59f09ab17f Commented May 12, 2018 at 19:28
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This should not be the accepted answer anymore. See the other answers. You can just call
return ViewComponent(...
in .NET Core Commented Jan 15, 2021 at 10:50
Here's a tag helper that I created to embed components via HTML like syntax. Invoking from a TagHelper like this should closely match invoking from a Controller.
ViewComponent Tag Helper
using System.Threading.Tasks;
using Microsoft.AspNetCore.Mvc;
using Microsoft.AspNetCore.Mvc.Rendering;
using Microsoft.AspNetCore.Mvc.ViewComponents;
using Microsoft.AspNetCore.Mvc.ViewFeatures;
using Microsoft.AspNetCore.Razor.TagHelpers;
namespace TagHelperSamples.Web
{
[HtmlTargetElement("component")]
public class ComponentTagHelper : TagHelper
{
private DefaultViewComponentHelper _componentHelper;
[HtmlAttributeName("name")]
public string Name { get; set; }
[HtmlAttributeName("params")]
public object Params { get; set; }
[ViewContextAttribute] // inform razor to inject
public ViewContext ViewContext { get; set; }
public ComponentTagHelper(IViewComponentHelper componentHelper)
{
_componentHelper = componentHelper as DefaultViewComponentHelper;
}
public override async Task ProcessAsync(TagHelperContext context, TagHelperOutput output)
{
_componentHelper.Contextualize(ViewContext);
output.Content.AppendHtml(
await _componentHelper.InvokeAsync(Name, Params)
);
}
}
}
Usage
<component name="RecentComments" params="new { take: 5, random: true }"></component>
Code from dotnetstep's answer updated for MVC 6.0.0-beta4 (VS2015 RC):
public class HomeController : Controller
{
Microsoft.AspNet.Mvc.ViewComponents.DefaultViewComponentHelper helper = null;
public HomeController(IViewComponentDescriptorCollectionProvider descriptorProvider, IViewComponentSelector selector, IViewComponentInvokerFactory invokerFactory)
{
helper = new DefaultViewComponentHelper(descriptorProvider, selector, invokerFactory);
}
public IActionResult Index()
{
ViewContext context = new ViewContext(ActionContext, null, ViewData, null, null);
helper.Contextualize(context);
string st1 = helper.Invoke("My", null).ToString();
return View();
}
}
Based on https://gist.github.com/pauldotknopf/b424e9b8b03d31d67f3cce59f09ab17f
public class HomeController : Controller
{
public async Task<string> RenderViewComponent(string viewComponent, object args)
{
var sp = HttpContext.RequestServices;
var helper = new DefaultViewComponentHelper(
sp.GetRequiredService<IViewComponentDescriptorCollectionProvider>(),
HtmlEncoder.Default,
sp.GetRequiredService<IViewComponentSelector>(),
sp.GetRequiredService<IViewComponentInvokerFactory>(),
sp.GetRequiredService<IViewBufferScope>());
using (var writer = new StringWriter())
{
var context = new ViewContext(ControllerContext, NullView.Instance, ViewData, TempData, writer, new HtmlHelperOptions());
helper.Contextualize(context);
var result = await helper.InvokeAsync(viewComponent, args);
result.WriteTo(writer, HtmlEncoder.Default);
await writer.FlushAsync();
return writer.ToString();
}
}
}
and
public class NullView : IView
{
public static readonly NullView Instance = new();
public string Path => string.Empty;
public Task RenderAsync(ViewContext context)
{
if (context == null)
{
throw new ArgumentNullException(nameof(context));
}
return Task.CompletedTask;
}
}