You can use the built-in MVC validation scripts along with the data annotaions on your model
public class AccountProfileEditViewModel
{
[Display(Name = "Address")]
[Required()]
[StringLength(200)]
public string Address { get; set; }
}
Make a partial view to hold your modal form.
_AccountProfileEdit.cshtml
@model AccountProfileEditViewModel
@using(Html.BeginForm("AccountProfileEdit", "Account",
FormMethod.Post, new { id = "form-accountedit-appt" }) {
@Html.ValidationSummary(true)
@Html.LabelFor(m => m.Address)
@Html.TextBoxFor(m => m.Address)
@Html.ValidationMessageFor(m => m.Address)
<button type="submit">Edit</button>
}
Then reference this in your modal box. If you want pre-populated model you'll need to render an action:
<div class="modal-body" id="form-container">
@Html.Action("AccountProfileEdit", "Account", new { id=account.Id })
</div>
If you just want a blank form then you can just use:
<div class="modal-body" id="form-container">
@Html.Partial("_AccountProfileEdit")
</div>
The action uses the id
parameter to fetch and populate the model
[HttpGet]
public ActionResult AccountProfileEdit(int id)
{
AccountProfileEditViewModel model = db.GetAccount(id); // however you do this in your app
return PartialView("_AccountProfileEdit", model);
}
AJAX POST
Now you'll need AJAX to submit this form. If you rely on a standard form submission the browser will navigate away from your page (and close your modal).
$("#myModal").on("submit", "#form-accountedit", function(e) {
e.preventDefault(); // prevent standard form submission
var form = $(this);
$.ajax({
url: form.attr("action"),
method: form.attr("method"), // post
data: form.serialize(),
success: function(partialResult) {
$("#form-container").html(partialResult);
}
});
});
You need to use the event delegate $(staticParent).on(event, target, handler)
for the submit event because the form content may be replaced later.
Post Action
[HttpPost]
public ActionResult AccountProfileEdit(AccountProfileEditViewModel model)
{
// Request.Form is model
if (ModelState.IsValid)
{
// do work
return PartialView("_AccountEditSuccess");
}
return PartialView("_AccountProfileEdit", model);
}
Client-side validation scripts should prevent them from ever submitting. But if that somehow failed or if you can't validate something on the client then you have ModelState.IsValid
. You might also invalidate something server-side manually.
_AccountEditSuccess.cshtml
And the "success" partial view.
<div>Success! <button>Click to close</button></div>
Not Valid is a Fail, Right?
From your AJAX success handler you have
success: function(partialResult) {
$("#form-container").html(partialResult);
}
But the problem here is we don't know if you are getting a "success" or "validation failure". Adding an error: function(err){ }
handler won't help because the validation failure is considered a HTTP 200 response. In both cases the div content is replaced the user will need to manually close the modal. There are ways to pass additional data to distinguish both conditions but that's another long answer post.