You can use the ActionName attribute like so:
[ActionName("My-Action")]
public ActionResult MyAction() {
return View();
}
Note that you will then need to call your View file "My-Action.cshtml" (or appropriate extension). You will also need to reference "my-action" in any Html.ActionLink methods.
There isn't such a simple solution for controllers.
Edit: Update for MVC5
Enable the routes globally:
public static void RegisterRoutes(RouteCollection routes)
{
routes.MapMvcAttributeRoutes();
// routes.MapRoute...
}
Now with MVC5, Attribute Routing has been absorbed into the project. You can now use:
[Route("My-Action")]
On Action Methods.
For controllers, you can apply a RoutePrefix
attribute which will be applied to all action methods in that controller:
[RoutePrefix("my-controller")]
One of the benefits of using RoutePrefix
is URL parameters will also be passed down to any action methods.
[RoutePrefix("clients/{clientId:int}")]
public class ClientsController : Controller .....
Snip..
[Route("edit-client")]
public ActionResult Edit(int clientId) // will match /clients/123/edit-client
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