AspNetCore.Docs/aspnetcore/mvc/views/view-components.md

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View Components | Microsoft Docs rick-anderson View Components are intended anywhere you have reusable rendering logic. ASP.NET Core,view components, partial view riande wpickett 12/14/2016 article ab4705b7-59d7-4f31-bc97-ea7f292fe926 aspnet aspnet-core mvc/views/view-components

View Components

By Rick Anderson

View or download sample code

Introducing view components

New to ASP.NET Core MVC, view components are similar to partial views, but they are much more powerful. View components dont use model binding, and only depend on the data you provide when calling into it. A view component:

  • Renders a chunk rather than a whole response

  • Includes the same separation-of-concerns and testability benefits found between a controller and view

  • Can have parameters and business logic

  • Is typically invoked from a layout page View Components are intended anywhere you have reusable rendering logic that is too complex for a partial view, such as:

  • Dynamic navigation menus

  • Tag cloud (where it queries the database)

  • Login panel

  • Shopping cart

  • Recently published articles

  • Sidebar content on a typical blog

  • A login panel that would be rendered on every page and show either the links to log out or log in, depending on the log in state of the user

A view component consists of two parts, the class (typically derived from ViewComponent and the result it returns (typically a view). Like controllers, a view component can be a POCO, but most developers will want to take advantage of the methods and properties available by deriving from ViewComponent.

Creating a view component

This section contains the high level requirements to create a view component. Later in the article we'll examine each step in detail and create a view component.

The view component class

A view component class can be created by any of the following:

  • Deriving from ViewComponent
  • Decorating a class with the [ViewComponent] attribute, or deriving from a class with the [ViewComponent] attribute
  • Creating a class where the name ends with the suffix ViewComponent

Like controllers, view components must be public, non-nested, and non-abstract classes. The view component name is the class name with the "ViewComponent" suffix removed. It can also be explicitly specified using the ViewComponentAttribute.Name property.

A view component class:

  • Fully supports constructor dependency injection

  • Does not take part in the controller lifecycle, which means you can't use filters in a view component

View component methods

A view component defines its logic in an InvokeAsync method that returns an IViewComponentResult. Parameters come directly from invocation of the view component, not from model binding. A view component never directly handles a request. Typically a view component initializes a model and passes it to a view by calling the View method. In summary, view component methods:

  • Define an InvokeAsync method that returns an IViewComponentResult
  • Typically initializes a model and passes it to a view by calling the ViewComponent View method
  • Parameters come from the calling method, not HTTP, there is no model binding
  • Are not reachable directly as an HTTP endpoint, they are invoked from your code (usually in a view). A view component never handles a request
  • Are overloaded on the signature rather than any details from the current HTTP request

View search path

The runtime searches for the view in the following paths:

  • Views/<controller_name>/Components/<view_component_name>/<view_name>
  • Views/Shared/Components/<view_component_name>/<view_name>

The default view name for a view component is Default, which means your view file will typically be named Default.cshtml. You can specify a different view name when creating the view component result or when calling the View method.

We recommend you name the view file Default.cshtml and use the Views/Shared/Components/<view_component_name>/<view_name> path. The PriorityList view component used in this sample uses Views/Shared/Components/PriorityList/Default.cshtml for the view component view.

Invoking a view component

To use the view component, call @Component.InvokeAsync("Name of view component", \<anonymous type containing parameters>) from a view. The parameters will be passed to the InvokeAsync method. The PriorityList view component developed in the article is invoked from the Views/Todo/Index.cshtml view file. In the following, the InvokeAsync method is called with two parameters:

@await Component.InvokeAsync("PriorityList", new { maxPriority = 2, isDone = false })

Invoking a view component directly from a controller

View components are typically invoked from a view, but you can invoke them directly from a controller method. While view components do not define endpoints like controllers, you can easily implement a controller action that returns the content of a ViewComponentResult.

In this example, the view component is called directly from the controller:

[!code-csharpMain]

Walkthrough: Creating a simple view component

Download, build and test the starter code. It's a simple project with a Todo controller that displays a list of Todo items.

image

Add a ViewComponent class

Create a ViewComponents folder and add the following PriorityListViewComponent class.

[!code-csharpMain]

Notes on the code:

  • View component classes can be contained in any folder in the project.

  • Because the class name PriorityListViewComponent ends with the suffix ViewComponent, the runtime will use the string "PriorityList" when referencing the class component from a view. I'll explain that in more detail later.

  • The [ViewComponent] attribute can change the name used to reference a view component. For example, we could have named the class XYZ, and applied the ViewComponent attribute:

    [ViewComponent(Name = "PriorityList")]
       public class XYZ : ViewComponent
    
  • The [ViewComponent] attribute above tells the view component selector to use the name PriorityList when looking for the views associated with the component, and to use the string "PriorityList" when referencing the class component from a view. I'll explain that in more detail later.

  • The component uses dependency injection to make the data context available.

  • InvokeAsync exposes a method which can be called from a view, and it can take an arbitrary number of arguments.

  • The InvokeAsync method returns the set of ToDo items that satisfy the isDone and maxPriority parameters.

Create the view component Razor view

  • Create the Views/Shared/Components folder. This folder must be named Components.

  • Create the Views/Shared/Components/PriorityList folder. This folder name must match the name of the view component class, or the name of the class minus the suffix (if we followed convention and used the ViewComponent suffix in the class name). If you used the ViewComponent attribute, the class name would need to match the attribute designation.

  • Create a Views/Shared/Components/PriorityList/Default.cshtml Razor view: [!code-htmlMain]

    The Razor view takes a list of TodoItem and displays them. If the view component InvokeAsync method doesn't pass the name of the view (as in our sample), Default is used for the view name by convention. Later in the tutorial, I'll show you how to pass the name of the view. To override the default styling for a specific controller, add a view to the controller specific view folder (for example Views/Todo/Components/PriorityList/Default.cshtml).

    If the view component is controller specific, you can add it to the controller specific folder (Views/Todo/Components/PriorityList/Default.cshtml).

  • Add a div containing a call to the priority list component to the bottom of the Views/Todo/index.cshtml file:

    [!code-htmlMain]

The markup @await Component.InvokeAsync shows the syntax for calling view components. The first argument is the name of the component we want to invoke or call. Subsequent parameters are passed to the component. InvokeAsync can take an arbitrary number of arguments.

Test the app. The following image shows the ToDo list and the priority items:

todo list and priority items

You can also call the view component directly from the controller:

[!code-csharpMain]

priority items from IndexVC action

Specifying a view name

A complex view component might need to specify a non-default view under some conditions. The following code shows how to specify the "PVC" view from the InvokeAsync method. Update the InvokeAsync method in the PriorityListViewComponent class.

[!code-csharpMain]

Copy the Views/Shared/Components/PriorityList/Default.cshtml file to a view named Views/Shared/Components/PriorityList/PVC.cshtml. Add a heading to indicate the PVC view is being used.

[!code-htmlMain]

Update Views/TodoList/Index.cshtml

[!code-htmlMain]

Run the app and verify PVC view.

image

If the PVC view is not rendered, verify you are calling the view component with a priority of 4 or higher.

Examine the view path

  • Change the priority parameter to three or less so the priority view is not returned.

  • Temporarily rename the Views/Todo/Components/PriorityList/Default.cshtml to 1Default.cshtml.

  • Test the app, you'll get the following error:

     An unhandled exception occurred while processing the request.
     InvalidOperationException: The view 'Components/PriorityList/Default' was not found. The following locations were searched:
     /Views/ToDo/Components/PriorityList/Default.cshtml
     /Views/Shared/Components/PriorityList/Default.cshtml
     EnsureSuccessful
       ```
    
    
  • Copy Views/Todo/Components/PriorityList/1Default.cshtml to *Views/Shared/Components/PriorityList/Default.cshtml.

  • Add some markup to the Shared Todo view component view to indicate the view is from the Shared folder.

  • Test the Shared component view.

ToDo output with Shared component view

Avoiding magic strings

If you want compile time safety you can replace the hard coded view component name with the class name. Create the view component without the "ViewComponent" suffix:

[!code-csharpMain]

Add a using statement to your Razor view file and use the nameof operator:

[!code-htmlMain]

Additional Resources