ASP.NET MVC can generate HTML elements using HTML Helpers, for example @Html.ActionLink()
, @Html.BeginForm()
and so on.
I know I can specify form attributes by creating an anonymous object and pass that object for the (fourth in this case) htmlAttributes
parameter where specifying an id
for the element:
Html.BeginForm("Foo", "Bar", FormMethod.Post, new { id = "MyForm"})
But what about the class
attribute? Obviously this does not work:
Html.BeginForm("Foo", "Bar", FormMethod.Post, new { class = "myclass"})
As that just throws random syntax errors when my view is requested, because it expects something else after encountering the C# keyword class
.
I've also tried:
new { _class = "myclass"}
and
new { class_ = "myclass"}
But they also did not work, as the underscores get replaced by dashes.
I know that I can just as well write the HTML elements by hand or wrap the form inside a <div class="myClass">
, but I'd still be interested to know how it is supposed to be done.
In order to create an anonymous type (or any type) with a property that has a reserved keyword as its name in C#, you can prepend the property name with an at sign,
@
:For VB.NET this syntax would be accomplished using the dot,
.
, which in that language is default syntax for all anonymous types:Current best practice in CSS development is to create more general selectors with modifiers that can be applied as widely as possible throughout the web site. I would try to avoid defining separate styles for individual page elements.
If the purpose of the CSS class on the
<form/>
element is to control the style of elements within the form, you could add the class attribute the existing<fieldset/>
element which encapsulates any form by default in web pages generated by ASP.NET MVC. A CSS class on the form is rarely necessary.