I’m attempting to create a single Controller class to handle all foreseeable surveys that I’ll end up creating in the future. Currently I have a ‘Surveys’ table with fields: Id, SurveyName, Active. On the ‘master’ Surveys’ Index page I list out every SurveyName found in that table. Each SurveyName is clickable, and when clicked on, the page sends the SurveyName as a string to the receiving controller action. Said controller action looks like this:
//
//GET: /Surveys/TakeSurvey/
public ActionResult TakeSurvey(string surveyName)
{
Assembly thisAssembly = Assembly.GetExecutingAssembly();
Type typeToCreate = thisAssembly.GetTypes().Where(t => t.Name == surveyName).First();
object newSurvey = Activator.CreateInstance(typeToCreate);
ViewBag.surveyName = surveyName;
return View(surveyName, newSurvey);
}
Using reflection I am able to create a new instance of the type (Model) designated by the passed-in string ‘surveyName’ and am able to pass that Model off to a view with the same name.
EXAMPLE
Someone clicks on “SummerPicnic,” the string “SummerPicnic” is passed to the controller. The controller, using reflection, creates a new instance of the SummerPicnic class and passes it to a view with the same name. A person is then able to fill out a form for their summer picnic plans.
This works all fine and dandy. The part that I’m stuck at is trying to save the form passed back by the POST method into the correct corresponding DB table. Since I don’t know ahead of time what sort of Model the controller will be getting back, I not only don’t know how to tell it what sort of Model to save, but where to save it to, either, since I can’t do something ridiculous like:
//
//POST: Surveys/TakeSurvey
[HttpPost]
public ActionResult TakeSurvey(Model survey)
{
if (ModelState.IsValid)
{
_db. + typeof(survey) + .Add(survey);
_db.SaveChanges();
return RedirectToAction("Index", "Home");
}
return View();
}
Is there a way to do this, or should I go about this from a whole different angle? My ultimate goal is to have a single Controller orchestrating every simple-survey, so I don’t have to create a separate controller for every single survey I end up making down the road.
An alternative solution I can think of is to have a separate method for every survey, and to have which method to call defined inside of every survey’s view. For example, if I had a SummerPicnic survey, the submit button would call an ActionMethod called ‘SummerPicnic’:
@Ajax.ActionLink("Create", "SummerPicnic", "Surveys", new AjaxOptions { HttpMethod = "POST" })
A survey for PartyAttendance would call an ActionMethod ‘PartyAttendance,’ etc. I’d rather not have to do that, though…
UPDATE 1
When I call:
_db.Articles.Add(article);
_db.SaveChanges();
This is what _db is:
private IntranetDb _db = new IntranetDb();
Which is…
using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Linq;
using System.Web;
using System.Data.Entity;
using System.Data.Entity.ModelConfiguration.Conventions;
namespace Intranet.Models
{
public class IntranetDb : DbContext
{
public DbSet<Article> Articles { get; set; }
public DbSet<ScrollingNews> ScrollingNews { get; set; }
public DbSet<Survey> Surveys { get; set; }
public DbSet<Surveys.test> tests { get; set; }
protected override void OnModelCreating(DbModelBuilder modelBuilder)
{
modelBuilder.Conventions.Remove<PluralizingTableNameConvention>();
}
}
}
I ended up with a slightly modified version of Mark’s code:
I was running into surveyType being ‘null’ when it was set to Type.GetType(surveyName); so I went ahead and retrieved the Type via Reflection.
The only trouble I’m running into now is here:
When it tries to AddObject I’m getting the exception “The EntitySet name ‘IntranetDb.test’ could not be found.” I just need to figure out to strip off the prefix ‘IntranetDb.’ and hopefully I’ll be in business.
UPDATE
One thing I completely overlooked was passing the Model to the controller from the View…oh bother. I currently have an ActionLink replacing the normal ‘Submit’ button, as I wasn’t sure how else to pass to the controller the string it needs to create the correct instance of Survey model:
So once I figure out how to turn ‘IntranetDb.test’ to just ‘test’ I’ll tackle how to make the Survey fields not all ‘null’ on submission.
UPDATE 2
I changed my submission method from using an Ajax ActionLink to a normal submit button. This fixed null values being set for my Model values after I realized that Mark’s bindingContext was doing the binding for me (injecting form values onto the Model values). So now my View submits with a simple:
Back to figuring out how to truncate ‘IntranetDb.test’ to just ‘test’…
Got It
The problem lies in my IntranetDb class:
objCtx.AddObject(surveyName, newSurveyEntry); was looking for an entry (an “EntitySet”) in the IntranetDb class called “test.” The problem lies in the fact that I don’t have an EntitySet by the name of “test” but rather by the name of “tests” with an ‘s’ for pluralization. Turns out I don’t need to truncate anything at all, I just need to point to the right object 😛 Once I get that straight I should be in business! Thank you Mark and Abhijit for your assistance! ^_^
FINISHED
It’s kind of bloated but it works for now. This post helped me get the EntitySet from the Survey object itself so I didn’t need to worry about establishing some sort of EntitySet naming convention.