MVC3 Razor DropDownListFor Enums
Solution 1:
I found a way simpler solution for this here: http://coding-in.net/asp-net-mvc-3-method-extension/
using System;
using System.Linq.Expressions;
using System.Web;
using System.Web.Mvc;
using System.Web.Mvc.Html;
namespace EnumHtmlHelper.Helper
{
public static class EnumDropDownList
{
public static HtmlString EnumDropDownListFor<TModel, TProperty>(this HtmlHelper<TModel> htmlHelper, Expression<Func<TModel, TProperty>> modelExpression, string firstElement)
{
var typeOfProperty = modelExpression.ReturnType;
if(!typeOfProperty.IsEnum)
throw new ArgumentException(string.Format("Type {0} is not an enum", typeOfProperty));
var enumValues = new SelectList(Enum.GetValues(typeOfProperty));
return htmlHelper.DropDownListFor(modelExpression, enumValues, firstElement);
} } }
One line in razor will do it:
@Html.DropDownListFor(model => model.State, new SelectList(Enum.GetValues(typeof(MyNamespace.Enums.States))))
You can also find code for doing it with an extension method in the linked article.
Solution 2:
I've just made one for my own project. The code below is part of my helper class, I hope that I got all methods needed. Write a comment if it doesn't work, and I'll check again.
public static class SelectExtensions
{
public static string GetInputName<TModel, TProperty>(Expression<Func<TModel, TProperty>> expression)
{
if (expression.Body.NodeType == ExpressionType.Call)
{
MethodCallExpression methodCallExpression = (MethodCallExpression)expression.Body;
string name = GetInputName(methodCallExpression);
return name.Substring(expression.Parameters[0].Name.Length + 1);
}
return expression.Body.ToString().Substring(expression.Parameters[0].Name.Length + 1);
}
private static string GetInputName(MethodCallExpression expression)
{
// p => p.Foo.Bar().Baz.ToString() => p.Foo OR throw...
MethodCallExpression methodCallExpression = expression.Object as MethodCallExpression;
if (methodCallExpression != null)
{
return GetInputName(methodCallExpression);
}
return expression.Object.ToString();
}
public static MvcHtmlString EnumDropDownListFor<TModel, TProperty>(this HtmlHelper<TModel> htmlHelper, Expression<Func<TModel, TProperty>> expression) where TModel : class
{
string inputName = GetInputName(expression);
var value = htmlHelper.ViewData.Model == null
? default(TProperty)
: expression.Compile()(htmlHelper.ViewData.Model);
return htmlHelper.DropDownList(inputName, ToSelectList(typeof(TProperty), value.ToString()));
}
public static SelectList ToSelectList(Type enumType, string selectedItem)
{
List<SelectListItem> items = new List<SelectListItem>();
foreach (var item in Enum.GetValues(enumType))
{
FieldInfo fi = enumType.GetField(item.ToString());
var attribute = fi.GetCustomAttributes(typeof(DescriptionAttribute), true).FirstOrDefault();
var title = attribute == null ? item.ToString() : ((DescriptionAttribute)attribute).Description;
var listItem = new SelectListItem
{
Value = ((int)item).ToString(),
Text = title,
Selected = selectedItem == ((int)item).ToString()
};
items.Add(listItem);
}
return new SelectList(items, "Value", "Text", selectedItem);
}
}
Use it as:
Html.EnumDropDownListFor(m => m.YourEnum);
Update
I've created alternative Html Helpers. All you need to do to use them is to change your baseviewpage in views\web.config
.
With them you can just do:
@Html2.DropDownFor(m => m.YourEnum);
@Html2.CheckboxesFor(m => m.YourEnum);
@Html2.RadioButtonsFor(m => m.YourEnum);
More info here: http://blog.gauffin.org/2011/10/first-draft-of-my-alternative-html-helpers/
Solution 3:
As of ASP.NET MVC 5.1 (RC1), EnumDropDownListFor
is included by default as an extension method of HtmlHelper
.
Solution 4:
If you want something really simple then there's another way, depending on how you store the state in the database.
If you had an entity like this:
public class Address
{
//other address fields
//this is what the state gets stored as in the db
public byte StateCode { get; set; }
//this maps our db field to an enum
public States State
{
get
{
return (States)StateCode;
}
set
{
StateCode = (byte)value;
}
}
}
Then generating the dropdown would be as easy as this:
@Html.DropDownListFor(x => x.StateCode,
from State state in Enum.GetValues(typeof(States))
select new SelectListItem() { Text = state.ToString(), Value = ((int)state).ToString() }
);
Isn't LINQ pretty?