I don´t know why my parameter \"ParametroFiltro Filtro\" is getting null, the other parameters \"page\" and \"pageSize\" is getting OK.
public class Parametr
It's also possible to access POST variables via a Newtonsoft.Json.Linq JObject.
For example, this POST:
$.ajax({
type: 'POST',
url: 'URL',
data: { 'Note': note, 'Story': story },
dataType: 'text',
success: function (data) { }
});
Can be accessed in an APIController like so:
public void Update([FromBody]JObject data)
{
var Note = (String)data["Note"];
var Story = (String)data["Story"];
}
If you append json data to query string, and parse it later in web api side. you can parse complex object too. It's useful rather than post json object, espeicaly in some special httpget requirement case.
//javascript file
var data = { UserID: "10", UserName: "Long", AppInstanceID: "100", ProcessGUID: "BF1CC2EB-D9BD-45FD-BF87-939DD8FF9071" };
var request = JSON.stringify(data);
request = encodeURIComponent(request);
doAjaxGet("/ProductWebApi/api/Workflow/StartProcess?data=", request, function (result) {
window.console.log(result);
});
//webapi file:
[HttpGet]
public ResponseResult StartProcess()
{
dynamic queryJson = ParseHttpGetJson(Request.RequestUri.Query);
int appInstanceID = int.Parse(queryJson.AppInstanceID.Value);
Guid processGUID = Guid.Parse(queryJson.ProcessGUID.Value);
int userID = int.Parse(queryJson.UserID.Value);
string userName = queryJson.UserName.Value;
}
//utility function:
public static dynamic ParseHttpGetJson(string query)
{
if (!string.IsNullOrEmpty(query))
{
try
{
var json = query.Substring(7, query.Length - 7); //seperate ?data= characters
json = System.Web.HttpUtility.UrlDecode(json);
dynamic queryJson = JsonConvert.DeserializeObject<dynamic>(json);
return queryJson;
}
catch (System.Exception e)
{
throw new ApplicationException("can't deserialize object as wrong string content!", e);
}
}
else
{
return null;
}
}
Provide the contentType
property when you make the ajax call. Use JSON.stringify method to build the JSON data to post. change the type to POST
and MVC Model binding will bind the posted data to your class object.
var filter = { "Filtro": { "Codigo": "_1", "Descricao": "TESTE" },
"page": "1", "pageSize": "10" };
$.ajax({
url: fullUrl,
type: 'POST',
dataType: 'json',
contentType: 'application/json',
data: JSON.stringify(filter),
success: function (result) {
alert(result.Data.length);
self.Parametros(result.Data);
}
});
You are trying to send a complex object with GET
method. The reason this is failing is that GET
method can't have a body and all the values are being encoded into the URL. You can make this work by using [FromUri]
, but first you need to change your client side code:
$.ajax({
url: fullUrl,
type: 'GET',
dataType: 'json',
data: { Codigo: '_1', Descricao: 'TESTE', page: 1, pageSize: 10 },
success: function (result) {
alert(result.Data.length);
self.Parametros(result.Data);
}
});
This way [FromUri]
will be able to pick up your complex object properties directly from the URL if you change your action method like this:
public PagedDataModel<ParametroDTO> Get([FromUri]ParametroFiltro Filtro, int page, int pageSize)
Your previous approach would rather work with POST
method which can have a body (but you would still need to use JSON.stringify()
to format body as JSON).