I have a situation where I want to display a button as being enabled or disabled depending on a property which has been set on the view model.
@if (Model.CanBeDe
Try this:
<button type="button" class="btn btn-danger btn-sm" disabled="@Model.CanBeDeleted">
<span class="glyphicon glyphicon-trash"> </span>
Delete
</button>
Go ahead. Try it. You'll notice that when @Model.CanBeDeleted
is false, the disable
attribute is missing from the element. Conversely, when @Model.CanBeDeleted
is true the disable
element is present, and is set to disable
How does it work?
It's thanks to Razor's "conditional attributes" feature. if you assign a razor variable to an atribute in your cshtml
(or vbhtml
) it will behave like this:
disabled=disabled
, checked=checked
... you get the idea)class="@myvar"
=> class="the_value_of_myvar
")What I love about this sintax is that it greatly helps in keeping your razor views readable.
You can read more about it in this article
You can use @Html.Raw
to inject markup directly into elements
<button @Html.Raw(Model.CanBeDeleted?"":"disabled='disabled'")
type="button" class="btn btn-danger btn-sm">
<span class="glyphicon glyphicon-trash"> </span> Delete
</button>
<!button @(Model.CanBeDeleted?"":"disabled='disabled'")
type="button" class="btn btn-danger btn-sm">
<span class="glyphicon glyphicon-trash"> </span> Delete
</!button>
You can Opt out individual elements from being evaluated as a TagHelper with !(Exclamation Point)
In its current form, Razor TagHelpers don't allow you to insert attributes by including the string literal of the attribute you want to insert.
Do the check once and have the disabled property be determined by a temporary variable called enabled.
@code
var enabled = "disabled='disabled'";
if(Model.CanBeDeleted)
enabled = "";
end code
<button Html.Raw(enabled) type="button" class="btn btn-danger btn-sm">
<span class="glyphicon glyphicon-trash"> </span>
Delete
</button>