What\'s the benefit of setting an alias for an action method using the \"ActionName\" attribute? I really don\'t see much benefit of it, in providing the user the option to
This class represents an attribute that is used for the name of an action. It also allows developers to use a different action name than the method name.
It is also useful if you have two Actions with the same signature that should have the same url.
A simple example:
public ActionResult SomeAction()
{
...
}
[ActionName("SomeAction")]
[HttpPost]
public ActionResult SomeActionPost()
{
...
}
I use it when the user downloads a report so that they can open their csv file directly into Excel easily.
[ActionName("GetCSV.csv")]
public ActionResult GetCSV(){
string csv = CreateCSV();
return new ContentResult() { Content = csv, ContentEncoding = System.Text.Encoding.UTF8, ContentType = "text/csv" };
}
It allows you to start your action with a number or include any character that .net does not allow in an identifier. - The most common reason is it allows you have two Actions with the same signature (see the GET/POST Delete actions of any scaffolded controller)
For example: you could allow dashes within your url action name http://example.com/products/create-product
vs http://example.com/products/createproduct
or http://example.com/products/create_product
.
public class ProductsController {
[ActionName("create-product")]
public ActionResult CreateProduct() {
return View();
}
}
It is also helpful when you need to implement method overloading.
public ActionResult ActorView()
{
return View(actorsList);
}
[ActionName("ActorViewOverload")]
public ActionResult ActorView(int id)
{
return RedirectToAction("ActorView","Home");
}
`
Here one ActorView accepts no parameters and the other accepts int. The first method used for viewing actor list and the other one is used for showing the same actor list after deleting an item with ID as 'id'. You can use action name as 'ActorViewOverload' whereever you need method overloading.
Try this code:
public class ProductsController
{
[ActionName("create-product")]
public ActionResult CreateProduct()
{
return View("CreateProduct");
}
}