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This is an ASP.Net web application, a hybrid of webforms and MVC v5.2.3. When I call Html.EditorFor on properties of the nested class the inputs render without an "id" attribute. How come? And is there anything I can change in the model to force asp.net to render an "id" attribute?

My model, "Parent", contains a nested class, "Child":

public class Parent
{
    public string ParentName {get;set;}

    public class _Child
    {
        public string ChildName {get;set;}
    }

    public Child _Child {get;set;}
}

On the view, when I render Parent.ParentName using Html.EditorFor(), it renders with both the "Name" and "Id" attributes. In other words, when I put this in the *.cshtml file:

@Html.EditorFor(m => m.ParentName)

It renders the following HTML:

<input id="ParentName" name="ParentName" type="text" value="" />

However, when I render Parent._Child.ChildName, it renders without the "Id" attribute. In other words, when I put this in the *.cshtml file:

@Html.EditorFor(m => m._Child.ChildName)

It renders the following HTML, without the "id" attribute:

<input name="_Child.ChildName" type="text" value="" />

How come? And can I do anything I the model to force generation of "id"? I realize I can add it myself using new HtmlAttributes and so on.

3
  • Why do not you create a input with hidden class for id?
    – topcool
    Dec 8, 2017 at 14:25
  • 2
    Change the _Child to start with a letter perhaps? Dec 8, 2017 at 14:30
  • Thank you @MarkSchultheiss, that was indeed the problem. Could you please change your comment to an answer? Then I can select it and guide future generations.
    – Tom Regan
    Dec 8, 2017 at 14:39

1 Answer 1

1

This uses the HTML 4 specification https://www.w3.org/TR/html401/types.html#case-sensitive which says that is must start with a letter, change the underscore to a letter and it should be OK.

Purely opinion but I would not use an underscore here anyway simply because it is harder to type.

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