I've been trying to figure out the difference between RenderAction and Action. I don't know if I'm so concerned about the differences at this point, as to why I can't get RenderAction to work. From what I can tell, I'm passing in the correct parameters. The overload I'm using seems to be the same for both:
@Html.RenderAction(Action, Controller, Route)
@Html.Action("Breadcrumb", "Navigation", new {SeoUrl = Model.CarlineBucket.SEOURLName})
@Html.RenderAction("Breadcrumb", "Navigation", new {SeoUrl = Model.CarlineBucket.SEOURLName})
I get a compilation error when I try and use RenderAction:
CS1502: The best overloaded method
match for
'System.Web.WebPages.WebPageExecutingBase.Write(System.Web.WebPages.HelperResult)'
has some invalid arguments.
Any tips or hints? Should I not even be bothering with RenderAction?
Try:
@{Html.RenderAction("Breadcrumb", "Navigation", new {SeoUrl = Model.CarlineBucket.SEOURLName});}
@Html.RenderAction()
generates a write call to output something on the page and in your case you are not doing so because RenderAction
renders the result directly to the Response.
Instead of
@Html.RenderAction()
Use
@{Html.RenderAction();}
From Phil Haack:
The difference between the two is that
Html.RenderAction
will render the
result directly to the Response (which
is more efficient if the action
returns a large amount of HTML)
whereas Html.Action
returns a string
with the result.
The return type of Html.RenderAction
is void
that means it directly render the responses in View where return type of Html.Action is MvcHtmlString
you can catch its render view in the controller and modified it also by using following method
protected string RenderPartialViewToString(string viewName, object model)
{
if (string.IsNullOrEmpty(viewName))
viewName = ControllerContext.RouteData.GetRequiredString("action");
ViewData.Model = model;
using (StringWriter sw = new StringWriter())
{
ViewEngineResult viewResult = ViewEngines.Engines.FindPartialView(ControllerContext, viewName);
ViewContext viewContext = new ViewContext(ControllerContext, viewResult.View, ViewData, TempData, sw);
viewResult.View.Render(viewContext, sw);
return sw.GetStringBuilder().ToString();
}
}
This will return the Html string of the View.