ASP.NET MVC “Ajax.BeginForm” executes OnSuccess ev

2020-02-08 16:03发布

问题:

I have a "submit feedback" form which uses "Ajax.BeginForm" to render a partial containing the form elements. The OnSuccess event is triggering even if the ModelState is not valid. Is this normal? I was expecting to be able to do a few postbacks resulting in an invalid model, then when the model is valid and there are no errors then the OnSuccess event would trigger?

回答1:

I handle this issue with a fairly simple javascript technique:

First setup your OnSuccess like this:

OnSuccess = "UpdateSuccessful(data)"

Then your javascript function like this:

function UpdateSuccessful(data) {
    if (data.indexOf("field-validation-error") > -1) return;

    // Do your valid stuff here
}

This way, there is no need to mess with your controller, or more importantly, your controller can return the Partial View with the model errors without doing anything weird, ie:

    public ActionResult SaveDetails(Project model)
    {
        if (ModelState.IsValid)
        {
            model.SaveProject();
        }

        return PartialView("ProjectForm", model);
    }

And in your AjaxOptions:

UpdateTargetId = "FormContents"

Now just make sure you have a div or something with id="FormContents" wherever you want your form displayed.



回答2:

Is this normal?

Yes, of course. If the server sends HTTP 200 the OnSuccess method is called. The notion of modelstate validity is server side only. As long as your controller action returns some view/partial/json/... the OnSuccess will trigger. If an exception is thrown inside your controller action then the OnError will be triggered instead of OnSuccess.

So in order to handle this case you could have your controller action do something along the lines of:

[HttpPost]
public ActionResult Process(MyViewModel model)
{
    if (!ModelState.IsValid)
    {
        return Json(new { success = false });
    }
    return Json(new { success = true });
}

and then:

function success(result) {
    if (result.success) {
        // the model was valid
    } else {
        // the model was invalid
    }
}

Now in the case of invalid model you might want to show the error messages to the user by refreshing the form. What you could do in this case is place your form inside a partial and in the event of an invalid modelstate you would return a partialview from your controller action and in the case of success a json object. So in your success handler you could test:

function success(result) {
    if (result.success) {
        // the model was valid
    } else {
        // there were errors => show them
        $('#myform_container').html(result);
        // if you are using client side validation you might also need
        // to take a look at the following article
        // http://weblogs.asp.net/imranbaloch/archive/2011/03/05/unobtrusive-client-side-validation-with-dynamic-contents-in-asp-net-mvc.aspx
        // and reattach the client validators to the form as you are
        // refreshing its DOM contents here
    }
}


回答3:

You can do the following:

var OnSuccess = function() {
    if ($(".validation-summary-errors").length == 0) { 
        //Your javascript/jquery code goes here
    }
}


回答4:

Slight variation on Luis' answer:

function OnSuccess() {
    if ($("span[class='field-validation-error']").length == 0) {
        alert("Target Platform saved Successfully.");
    }
}


回答5:

I return a bad request instead of the View to ensure that the ajax call returns onfail and not onsuccess.

In the xhr.statustext you can find the string written in the bad request and manage correctly the onfail event.

Server side:

if (!ModelState.IsValid)
        {
            return new HttpStatusCodeResult(HttpStatusCode.BadRequest, "Model not valid");
        }

Client side:

$.ajax({
        url: '',
        method: 'POST'            
       }).fail(function (xhr) {
           alert(xhr.statustext);
       });