After researching this further, I have an explanation why the following code has no effect in the Action:
product.ProductName = "This has no effect";
ViewData["ProductName"] = "This has no effect either";
My View uses HTML Helpers:
<% Html.EditorFor(x => x.ProductName);
HTML Helpers uses the following order precedence when attempting lookup of the key:
- ViewData.ModelState dictionary entry
- Model property (if a strongly typed view. This property is a shortcut to View.ViewData.Model)
- ViewData dictionary entry
For HTTP Post Actions, ModelState is always populated, so modifying the Model (product.ProductName) or ViewData directly (ViewData["ProductName"]) has no effect.
If you do need to modify ModelState directly, the syntax to do so is:
ModelState.SetModelValue("ProductName", new ValueProviderResult("Your new value", "", CultureInfo.InvariantCulture));
Or, to clear the ModelState value:
ModelState.SetModelValue("ProductName", null);
You can create an extension method to simplify the syntax:
public static class ModelStateDictionaryExtensions {
public static void SetModelValue(this ModelStateDictionary modelState, string key, object rawValue) {
modelState.SetModelValue(key, new ValueProviderResult(rawValue, String.Empty, CultureInfo.InvariantCulture));
}
}
Then you can simply write:
ModelState.SetModelValue("ProductName", "Your new value");
For more details, see Consumption of Data in MVC2 Views.
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