I looked around and couldn\'t find an easy solution.
I\'ve tried @GetUserName
which doesn\'t work.
I\'ve tried @ { GetUserName
which do
Trying to call a controller action method directly from your view is usually a sign of bad design.
You have a few options, depending on what you are trying to do:
(1) is usually my default approach, often incorporating DisplayTemplates and EditorTemplates
For (3), e.g.
public static class Util
{
public string MyUtilMethod(int blah)
}
And the view:
@Util.MyUtilMethod(1)
Although you can obtain the controller instance from your view, doing so is plain wrong as it violates the whole MVC (and MVVM) paradigm, as the view should not be aware of its controller.
(The only possible reason I can think of where this would be useful would perhaps be for testing the controller from a mocked view, although even here, it should be possible to test the exposed controller functionality directly from unit tests):
@{
var controller = ViewContext.Controller as MyController;
var userName = controller.GetUserName(123);
}
The better way to have arrived at this result is for the controller to pre-populate, and pass all the data needed by the View
, such as the userName
, to a custom ViewModel
(as typed by the @model
directive at the top of the Razor page), or to the ViewBag
dynamic.