MVC razor form with multiple different submit butt

2019-01-21 09:01发布

问题:

A Razor view has 3 buttons inside a form. All button's actions will need form values which are basically values coming input fields.

Every time I click any of buttons it redirected me to default action. Can you please guide how I can submit form to different actions based on button press ?

I really appreciate your time, guidance and help.

回答1:

You could also try this:

<input type="submit" name="submitbutton1" value="submit1" />
<input type="submit" name="submitbutton2" value="submit2" />

Then in your default function you call the functions you want:

if( Request.Form["submitbutton1"] != null)
{
    // Code for function 1
}
else if(Request.Form["submitButton2"] != null )
{
    // code for function 2
}


回答2:

This elegant solution works for number of submit buttons:

@Html.Begin()
{
  // Html code here
  <input type="submit" name="command" value="submit1" />
  <input type="submit" name="command" value="submit2" />

}

And in your controllers' action method accept it as a parameter.

public ActionResult Create(Employee model, string command)
{
    if(command.Equals("submit1"))
    {
      // Call action here...
    }
    else
    {
      // Call another action here...
    }
}


回答3:

in the view

<form action="/Controller_name/action" method="Post>

 <input type="submit" name="btn1" value="Ok" />
 <input type="submit" name="btn1" value="cancel" />
 <input type="submit" name="btn1" value="Save" />
</form>

in the action

string str =Request.Params["btn1"];
if(str=="ok"){


}
if(str=="cancel"){


}
if(str=="save"){


}


回答4:

You can use JS + Ajax. For example, if you have any button you can say it what it must do on click event. Here the code:

 <input id="btnFilterData" type="button" value="myBtn">

Here your button in html: in the script section, you need to use this code (This section should be at the end of the document):

<script type="text/javascript">
$('#btnFilterData').click(function () {
    myFunc();
});
</script>

And finally, you need to add ajax function (In another script section, which should be placed at the begining of the document):

function myFunc() {
    $.ajax({
        type: "GET",
        contentType: "application/json",
        url: "/myController/myFuncOnController",
        data: {
             //params, which you can pass to yu func
        },
        success: function(result) {

        error: function (errorData) {

        }
    });
};


回答5:

The cleanest solution I've found is as follows:

This example is to perform two very different actions; the basic premise is to use the value to pass data to the action.

In your view:

@using (Html.BeginForm("DliAction", "Dli", FormMethod.Post, new { id = "mainForm" }))
{
    if (isOnDli)
    {
        <button name="removeDli" value="@result.WeNo">Remove From DLI</button>
    }
    else
    {
        <button name="performDli" value="@result.WeNo">Perform DLI</button>
    }
}

Then in your action:

    public ActionResult DliAction(string removeDli, string performDli)
    {
        if (string.IsNullOrEmpty(performDli))
        {
            ...
        }
        else if (string.IsNullOrEmpty(removeDli))
        {
            ...
        }

        return View();
    }

This code should be easy to alter in order to achieve variations along the theme, e.g. change the button's name to be the same, then you only need one parameter on the action etc, as can be seen below:

In your view:

@using (Html.BeginForm("DliAction", "Dli", FormMethod.Post, new { id = "mainForm" }))
{

        <button name="weNo" value="@result.WeNo">Process This WeNo</button>

        <button name="weNo" value="@result.WeNo">Process A Different WeNo This Item</button>
}

Then in your action:

    public ActionResult DliAction(string weNo)
    {
        // Process the weNo...

        return View();
    }


回答6:

Try wrapping each button in it's own form in your view.

  @using (Html.BeginForm("Action1", "Controller"))
  {
    <input type="submit" value="Button 1" />
  }

  @using (Html.BeginForm("Action2", "Controller"))
  {
    <input type="submit" value="Button 2" />
  }


回答7:

You could use normal buttons(non submit). Use javascript to rewrite (at an 'onclick' event) the form's 'action' attribute to something you want and then submit it. Generate the button using a custom helper(create a file "Helper.cshtml" inside the App_Code folder, at the root of your project) .

@helper SubmitButton(string text, string controller,string action)
{   
    var uh = new System.Web.Mvc.UrlHelper(Context.Request.RequestContext);
    string url = @uh.Action(action, controller, null);   
    <input type=button  onclick="(
                                       function(e)
                                                 {
                                                   $(e).parent().attr('action', '@url'); //rewrite action url
                                                   //create a submit button to be clicked and removed, so that onsubmit is triggered
                                                   var form = document.getElementById($(e).parent().attr('id'));
                                                   var button = form.ownerDocument.createElement('input');
                                                   button.style.display = 'none';
                                                   button.type = 'submit';
                                                   form.appendChild(button).click(); 
                                                   form.removeChild(button);              
                                                  }
                                      )(this)" value="@text"/>
}

And then use it as:

@Helpers.SubmitButton("Text for 1st button","ControllerForButton1","ActionForButton1")
@Helpers.SubmitButton("Text for 2nd button","ControllerForButton2","ActionForButton2")
...

Inside your form.



回答8:

Simplest way is to use the html5 FormAction and FormMethod

<input type="submit" 
           formaction="Save"
           formmethod="post" 
           value="Save" />
    <input type="submit"
           formaction="SaveForLatter"
           formmethod="post" 
           value="Save For Latter" />
    <input type="submit"
           formaction="SaveAndPublish"
           formmethod="post"
           value="Save And Publish" />

[HttpPost]
public ActionResult Save(CustomerViewModel model) {...}

[HttpPost]
public ActionResult SaveForLatter(CustomerViewModel model){...}

[HttpPost]
public ActionResult SaveAndPublish(CustomerViewModel model){...}

There are many other ways which we can use, see this article ASP.Net MVC multiple submit button use in different ways



回答9:

This answer will show you that how to work in asp.net with razor, and to control multiple submit button event. Lets for example we have two button, one button will redirect us to "PageA.cshtml" and other will redirect us to "PageB.cshtml".

@{
  if (IsPost)
    {
       if(Request["btn"].Equals("button_A"))
        {
          Response.Redirect("PageA.cshtml");
        }
      if(Request[&quot;btn"].Equals("button_B"))
        {
          Response.Redirect(&quot;PageB.cshtml&quot;);
        }
  }
}
<form method="post">
   <input type="submit" value="button_A" name="btn"/>;
   <input type="submit" value="button_B" name="btn"/>;          
</form>



回答10:

In case you're using pure razor, i.e. no MVC controller:

<button name="SubmitForm" value="Hello">Hello</button>
<button name="SubmitForm" value="World">World</button>
@if (IsPost)
{
    <p>@Request.Form["SubmitForm"]</p>
}

Clicking each of the buttons should render out Hello and World.



回答11:

Didn't see an answer using tag helpers (Core MVC), so here it goes (for a delete action):

On HTML:

<form action="" method="post" role="form">
<table>
@for (var i = 0; i < Model.List.Count(); i++)
{
    <tr>
        <td>@Model.List[i].ItemDescription</td>
        <td>
            <input type="submit" value="REMOVE" class="btn btn-xs btn-danger" 
             asp-controller="ControllerName" asp-action="delete" asp-route-idForDeleteItem="@Model.List[i].idForDeleteItem" />
        </td>
    </tr>
}
</table>
</form>

On Controller:

[HttpPost("[action]/{idForDeleteItem}"), ActionName("Delete")]
public async Task<IActionResult> DeleteConfirmed(long idForDeleteItem)
{
    ///delete with param id goes here
}

Don't forget to use [Route("[controller]")] BEFORE the class declaration - on controller.



回答12:

This is what worked for me.

formaction="@Url.Action("Edit")"

Snippet :

 <input type="submit" formaction="@Url.Action("Edit")" formmethod="post" value="Save" class="btn btn-primary" />

<input type="submit" formaction="@Url.Action("PartialEdit")" formmethod="post" value="Select Type" class="btn btn-primary" />

 [HttpPost]
        [ValidateAntiForgeryToken]
        public ActionResult Edit( Quote quote)
        {
           //code 
       }
 [HttpPost]
        [ValidateAntiForgeryToken]
        public ActionResult PartialEdit(Quote quote)
        {
           //code
        }

Might help some one who wants to have 2 different action methods instead of one method using selectors or using client scripts .