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Home/ Questions/Q 8309587
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 8, 20262026-06-08T19:10:04+00:00 2026-06-08T19:10:04+00:00

Just a quick question, when you create a new controller for a new MVC

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Just a quick question, when you create a new controller for a new MVC ASP.Net app how does it know which controller to use. More specifically, given you create a new controller and you call it SockController in order to use said controller I would navigate to http://mywebapp/sock. How did the web app know that /Sock/ is linked to SockController? Is there a mapping somewhere ? Or if not what happens when if you call omit controller from the name when creating it, ie call it SockCont.

Note: I am not a Web Dev im just curious so please don’t post links to page with tons of text, im looking for a short simple answer.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-08T19:10:06+00:00Added an answer on June 8, 2026 at 7:10 pm

    ASP.NET Routing extracts the name of the controller from the URL by getting the Route Value and then appending “Controller” to the end. So “/home/” returns “HomeController”.

    ASP.NET then uses reflection to go through every class in the project’s assembly (or referenced assemblies) to find a class that inherits from System.Web.Mvc.Controller and is called “HomeController”. It then uses the default, parameterless constructor to create an instance of it.

    It then matches the Route action to a method of the controller.

    This process is called “Dispatch” and similar patterns are seen in PHP, Ruby-on-Rails, etc, except that dynamic languages like those have different ways of resolving class names to actual objects (CakePHP uses Class auto-loading bindings to locate the class definition, for example).

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