when do you think is it better to use ViewData over a view model?
I have the same exact partial view in a couple of main views. I\'d like to control how a partial view i
I think you should stick to using a ViewModel
, your ViewModel
is the class that defines your requirements for the view.
My reason behind this is that in the long run, it will be a lot more maintainable. When using ViewBag
it's a dynamic
class so in your views you should be checking if the ViewBag
property exists (And can lead to silly mistakes like typo's) e.g.:
if(ViewBag.PropertyName != null)
{
// ViewBag.PropertyName is a different property to ViewBag.propertyName
}
This type of code can make your View's quite messy. If you use a strongly typed model, you should be able to put most of the logic in your controllers and keep the View as clean as possible which is a massive plus in my books.
You also will also end up (if you use ViewBag
) attempting to maintain it at some point and struggle. You are removing one great thing about C#, it's a strongly typed language! ViewBag
is not strongly typed, you may think you are passing in a List
but you could just be passing a string
.
One last point, you also will lose out on any intellisense features in Visual Studio.
I feel like it may start to be too messy in my project if I make view model for each action.
Wont it just be as messy in your controllers assigning everything to a ViewBag
? If it was a ViewModel
you could send it off to a 'Mapping' class to map your DTO to your View.
Instead of this:
// ViewModel
var model = new CustomViewModel()
{
PropertyOne = result.FirstResult,
PropertyTwo = result.SecondResult,
}
//ViewBag
ViewBag.PropertyOne = result.FirstResult;
ViewBag.PropertyTwo = result.SecondResult;
You could do this:
var mapper = new Map();
var model = mapper.MapToViewModel(result);
*You would obviously need to provide an implimentation to the mapping class, look at something like Automapper
I'd also prefer the partial view to accept only a view model which is a collection of records, just a pure IEnumerable<> object. I'd rather avoid to send the full view model object from a main view because it also contains a lot of different properties, objects, that control paging, sorting, filtering etc.
That is fine, just create a view model that has a property of IEnumerable
. In my opinion you should try and use a strongly typed ViewModel
in all of your scenarios.