79
votes

I'm very new to web app development and I thought I would start with recent technology and so I'm trying to learn asp.net as-well as the MVC framework at once. This is probably a very simple question for you, MVC professionals.

My question is should a partial view have an associated action, and if so, does this action get invoked whenever a normal page uses RenderPartial() on the partial view?

4

4 Answers

138
votes

While you can have an action that returns a partial view, you don't need an action to render a partial view. RenderPartial takes the partial view and renders it, using the given model and view data if supplied, into the current (parent) view.

You might want an action that returns a partial view if you are using AJAX to load/reload part of a page. In that case, returning the full view is not desired since you only want to reload part of the page. In this case you can have the action just return the partial view that corresponds to that section of the page.

Standard mechanism

Making use of partial view within a normal view (no action needed)

...some html...
<% Html.RenderPartial( "Partial", Model.PartialModel ); %>
...more html..

Ajax mechanism

Reloading part of a page via AJAX (note partial is rendered inline in initial page load)

...some html...
<div id="partial">
<% Html.RenderPartial( "Partial", Model.PartialModel ); %>
</div>
...more html...

<script type="text/javascript">
   $(function() {
       $('#someButton').click( function() {
           $.ajax({
              url: '/controller/action',
              data: ...some data for action...,
              dataType: 'html',
              success: function(data) {
                 $('#partial').html(data);
              },
              ...
           });
       });
   });
</script>

Controller for AJAX

public ActionResult Action(...)
{
     var model = ...

     ...

     if (Request.IsAjaxRequest())
     {
          return PartialView( "Partial", model.PartialModel );
     }
     else
     {
          return View( model );
     }
}
3
votes

The accepted answer is completely correct, but I want to add that you can load your partial view using jQuery load. Less configuration needed, if you don't want to consider concurrency.

$("#Your-Container").load("/controller/action/id");
3
votes

I was able to achieve something similar with this logic.

Within the .cshtml

@Html.Action("ActionMethodName", "ControllerName");

Within the controller

[Route("some-action")]
public ActionResult ActionMethodName()
{
    var someModel = new SomeModel();
    ...
    return PartialView("SomeView.cshtml", someModel);
}

And that's it.

If you need to pass values from the .cshtml to the action method then that is possible to.

2
votes

The answer is no. But sometimes you need some controller action behind a partial view. Then you can create an actionMethod wich returns a partial view. This actionMethod can be called within another view:

@Html.Action("StockWarningsPartial", "Stores")

The actionmethod can look like:

public ActionResult StockWarningsPartial()
{
      ....              
      return View("StockWarningsPartial", warnings);

}

and the view 'StockWarningsPartial.cshtml' starts with:

@{
    Layout = null;
}

to make it not render your surrounding layout again.