I\'d like to give the like generated with an Html.ActionLink
an HTML id so I can change the CSS depending on where I am. I have a MasterPage
with a set
Try this:
<%: Html.ActionLink("Some View", "Index", "controller", null, new {id="something}")%>
Basically it's giving an error because there is no method overload that has the signature you want.
The closest signature to the one that you need is
public static string ActionLink(
this HtmlHelper htmlHelper,
string linkText,
string actionName,
string controllerName,
Object routeValues,
Object htmlAttributes
)
You are passing the id attribute into the routevalue which is why it's giving you the funny href. pass null into the routevalue, then add your htmlattributes
try this
@Html.ActionLink("Forgot your access?", "RecoverPassword",
"Account", new { area = "registration-full.html" },
new { @class = "col-xs-6", id = "login-forget-link" })
You were on the right track. I am not sure why it didn't work for you as your code has a typo which would have produced a } expected
error. The following is what you are looking for:
<%= Html.ActionLink("Test Link", "SomeAction", "SomeController",
null, new {id = "someID" }) %>
Which produces teh following HTML:
<a href="/SomeController/SomeAction" id="someID">Test Link</a>
Edit: I just realized what the issue is because I was mis-reading what you tried. You are using the wrong overload to pass in the id
html element. Your probably passing the new { id="blah" }
param into the routeValues
parameter, which will cause it to be used when building the route link, rather than the htmlAttributes
paramater which is what you want.
I think you are using:
ActionLink(string linkText, string actionName, Object routeValues,
Object htmlAttributes)
When what you need to use is the following overload like I did above in my answer:
ActionLink(string linkText, string actionName, string controllerName,
Object routeValues, Object htmlAttributes)
Which makes sure new { id="blah" }
is being passed into the htmlAttributes
param.