Reputation: 2054
I've read many articles which they state that querying should not be placed in the Controller, but I can't seem to see where else I would place it.
My Current Code:
public class AddUserViewModel
{
public UserRoleType UserRoleType { get; set; }
public IEnumerable<SelectListItem> UserRoleTypes { get; set; }
}
public ActionResult AddUser()
{
AddUserViewModel model = new AddUserViewModel()
{
UserRoleTypes = db.UserRoleTypes.Select(userRoleType => new SelectListItem
{
Value = SqlFunctions.StringConvert((double)userRoleType.UserRoleTypeID).Trim(),
Text = userRoleType.UserRoleTypeName
})
};
return View(model);
}
The View:
<li>@Html.Label("User Role")@Html.DropDownListFor(x => Model.UserRoleType.UserRoleTypeID, Model.UserRoleTypes)</li>
How do I retain the View Model and Query and exclude the User Type that should not show up?
Upvotes: 0
Views: 481
Reputation: 14133
I think that you are doing it just fine.
Any way... all you can do to remove the querying logic from controller is having a ServiceLayer where you do the query and return the result.
The MVC pattern here is used correctly... what your are lacking is the other 2 layers (BusinessLayer and DataAccessLayer)... since ASP.NET MVC is the UI Layer.
UPDATE, due to comment:
Using var userroletypes = db.UserRoleTypes.Where(u=> u.UserRoleType != 1);
is OK, it will return a list of UserRoleType that satisfy the query.
Then, just create a new SelectList object using the userroletypes collection... and asign it to the corresponding viewmodel property. Then pass that ViewModel to the View.
BTW, I never used the db.XXXX.Select()
method before, not really sure what it does... I always use Where
clause.
SECOND UPDATE: A DropDownList is loaded from a SelectList that is a collection of SelectItems. So you need to convert the collection resulting of your query to a SelectList object.
var userroletypes = new SelectList(db.UserRoleTypes.Where(u=> u.UserRoleType != 1), "idRoleType", "Name");
then you create your ViewModel
var addUserVM = new AddUserViewModel();
addUserVM.UserRoleTypes = userroletypes;
and pass addUserVM
to your view:
return View(addUserVM );
Note: I'm assuming your ViewModel has a property of type SelectList
... but yours is public IEnumerable<SelectListItem> UserRoleTypes { get; set; }
so you could change it or adapt my answer.
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 1038720
I don't see anything wrong with your code other than this db
instance that I suppose is some concrete EF context that you have hardcoded in the controller making it impossible to unit test in isolation. Your controller action does exactly what a common GET controller action does:
A further improvement would be to get rid of the UserRoleType
domain model type from your view model making it a real view model:
public class AddUserViewModel
{
[DisplayName("User Role")]
public string UserRoleTypeId { get; set; }
public IEnumerable<SelectListItem> UserRoleTypes { get; set; }
}
and then:
public ActionResult AddUser()
{
var model = new AddUserViewModel()
{
UserRoleTypes = db.UserRoleTypes.Select(userRoleType => new SelectListItem
{
Value = SqlFunctions.StringConvert((double)userRoleType.UserRoleTypeID).Trim(),
Text = userRoleType.UserRoleTypeName
})
};
return View(model);
}
and in the view:
@model AddUserViewModel
<li>
@Html.LabelFor(x => x.UserRoleTypeId)
@Html.DropDownListFor(x => x.UserRoleTypeId, Model.UserRoleTypes)
</li>
Upvotes: 0