18

Are lambda expressions/anonymous methods supported in the Razor view engine?

I am having difficulty expressing the following in Razor:

@Model.ToList().ForEach(i =>
    {
        if (i.DealerName != null) 
        {
            <text> 
                @i.DealerName
            </text>
        }
    }

Note: I know can solve this with @foreach but I need a similar solution for a 3rd party MVC control. It using this mechanism for setting the content of the control. It works fine for MVC .ASPX views but cannot get it to work with Razor.


MVC .ASPX equivalent (the code I would like to convert to Razor syntax):

<% Model.ToList().ForEach(i =>
       {
           if (i.DealerName != null)
           { 
           %> <%=i.DealerName%> <%
           };
       }); 
%>

This is for the Razor engine that ships with ASP.NET MVC3.

3 Answers 3

11

Instead of your <text>@i.DealerName</text> block you could use a Response.Write(i.DealerName);

The result is the same, as if you drop this in a Razor page - it will execute while rendering page.. And frankly - I'm pretty sure this is what it will be compiled into anyway.

Also, since ForEach() returns void, you'd have to drop it in the page as a code block. So your code would look something like this:

@{
    Model.ToList().ForEach(i =>
    {
        if (i.DealerName != null) 
        {
            Response.Write(i.DealerName);
        }
    });
}

UPD: If you have more serious formatting, you can resort to this nice little trick:
(unfortunately the code colouring here will not give this snippet any credit, but you'll definitely see what I mean if you drop this in visual studio. Note: this will only work in Razor pages, not code files :) )

@{
    Model.ToList().ForEach(i =>
    {
        if (i.DealerName != null) 
        {
            Response.Write(((Func<dynamic, object>)(
                @<text>
                    <b>Hello Dealer named: @item.DealerName
                    Multiline support is <em>Beautiful!</em>
                </text>)).Invoke(i));
        }
    });
}

Hope that makes sense :)

15
  • Yes Response.Write works but for a more complex example the string concatenation gets out of hand very quickly. :( Feb 8, 2011 at 1:11
  • Yes, you're right.. I've updated the post to allow pretty much any kind of Razor code inside this function.. Enjoy :) Feb 8, 2011 at 1:27
  • Thanks for your trouble you took Artiom. I particularly like your multi line trick. Unfortunately I cannot drop into a code block like this. As I mentioned in my question I need provide my content/template inside the component vendors lambda expression to build the control. It seems so simple in the .ASPX code. Am I to take it that lambda expressions is not supported in Razor the same level as for MVC .ASPX code? Feb 8, 2011 at 1:39
  • Wait.. but in your .aspx example you're doing the same thing.. You're opening up a code block, and you execute a .ForEach method there.. Surely you should be able to just do the same in a Razor control.. At least I never had any issues doing that Feb 8, 2011 at 1:43
  • Hmm.. Just a note, I think not everyone knows that you can put a @{ code goes here } block anywhere on a razor page, not just as the "head" of the .cshtml file. In fact you have to use code blocks like this if you want to run void methods in the middle of an aspx, or create new variables :) Feb 8, 2011 at 1:47
3

Alternatively, you can create a lambda function, and call that for each item in the body of your Razor code (the idea came from Andy in this post):

@model IEnumerable<Dealer>

@{
    Func<Dealer, object> sayHi = 
        @<text>
             <b>Hello Dealer named: @(item.DealerName)</b>
             Multiline support is <em>Beautiful!</em>
         </text>;
}

<div>
    @foreach(var dealer in Model.ToList())
    {
        sayHi(dealer);
    }
</div>
1

Yes, they are supported. BUT, Razor has some weird escaping rules and extra braces will cause it to choke sometimes, including those in extended lambda expressions.

You can simplify the @Artioms answer a bit to remove those extra braces with a where and optionally a select clause

@{
    Model.ToList().ForEach(i =>
    {
        if (i.DealerName != null) 
        {
            Response.Write(i.DealerName);
        }
    });
}

becomes

@{
    Model.Where(i=>i.DealerName != null).ToList().ForEach(i =>
    {
            Response.Write(i.DealerName);
    });
}

Could also become

@{Model.Where(i=>i.DealerName != null).Select(i=>i.DealerName)
    .ToList().ForEach(Response.Write);}

Yay functional styles!

2
  • Thanks for the feedback but it does not answer the question. Sep 18, 2012 at 7:51
  • I reworded the top to be a bit more clear - it improves on @Artioms answer. I also provided another workaround - removing extra braces that could potentially confuse the razor compiler. I think it's useful, at the bare minimum.
    – scaryman
    Sep 18, 2012 at 13:24

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