Saturday, 5 August 2017

ViewBag in ASP.NET MVC

We have learned in the previous section that the model object is used to send data in a razor view. However, there may be some scenario where you want to send a small amount of temporary data to the view. So for this reason, MVC framework includes ViewBag.
ViewBag can be useful when you want to transfer temporary data (which is not included in model) from the controller to the view. The viewBag is a dynamic type property of ControllerBase class which is the base class of all the controllers.
The following figure illustrates the ViewBag.
ViewBag
In the above figure, it attaches Name property to ViewBag with the dot notation and assigns a string value "Bill" to it in the controller. This can be accessed in the view like @ViewBag.Name. (@ is razor syntax to access the server side variable.)
You can assign a primitive or a complex type object as a value to ViewBag property.

You can assign any number of properties and values to ViewBag. If you assign the same property name multiple times to ViewBag, then it will only consider last value assigned to the property.
Note :ViewBag only transfers data from controller to view, not visa-versa. ViewBag values will be null if redirection occurs.
The following example demonstrates how to transfer data from controller to view using ViewBag.
Example: Set ViewBag in Action method

namespace MVC_BasicTutorials.Controllers
{
    public class StudentController : Controller
    {
        IList<Student> studentList = new List<Student>() { 
                    new Student(){ StudentID=1, StudentName="Steve", Age = 21 },
                    new Student(){ StudentID=2, StudentName="Bill", Age = 25 },
                    new Student(){ StudentID=3, StudentName="Ram", Age = 20 },
                    new Student(){ StudentID=4, StudentName="Ron", Age = 31 },
                    new Student(){ StudentID=5, StudentName="Rob", Age = 19 }
                };
        // GET: Student
        public ActionResult Index()
        {
            ViewBag.TotalStudents = studentList.Count();

            return View();
        }

    }
}

In the above example, we want to display the total number of students in a view for the demo. So, we have attached the TotalStudents property to the ViewBag and assigned the student count using studentList.Count().
Now, in the Index.cshtml view, you can access ViewBag.TotalStudents property and display all the student info as shown below.
Example: Acess ViewBag in a View

<label>Total Students:</label>  @ViewBag.TotalStudents

Output:

Total Students: 5
ViewBag doesn't require typecasting while retriving values from it.
Internally, ViewBag is a wrapper around ViewData. It will throw a runtime exception, if the ViewBag property name matches with the key of ViewData.


Points to Remember :

  1. ViewBag transfers data from the controller to the view, ideally temporary data which in not included in a model.
  2. ViewBag is a dynamic property that takes advantage of the new dynamic features in C# 4.0
  3. You can assign any number of propertes and values to ViewBag
  4. The ViewBag's life only lasts during the current http request. ViewBag values will be null if redirection occurs.
  5. ViewBag is actually a wrapper around ViewData.

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