do like this:
<a href="@Url.Action("Edit")" id="@use.userID">
<img src="@Url.Content("~/images/someimage.png")" />
</a>
or pass both action and controller name by using other override:
<a href="@Url.Action("Edit","Controller")" id="@use.userID">
<img src="@Url.Content("~/images/someimage.png")" />
</a>
UPDATE:
You can also create a custom Html Helper, and can reuse it in any View in application:
namespace MyApplication.Helpers
{
public static class CustomHtmlHelepers
{
public static IHtmlString ImageActionLink(this HtmlHelper htmlHelper, string linkText, string action, string controller, object routeValues, object htmlAttributes,string imageSrc)
{
var urlHelper = new UrlHelper(htmlHelper.ViewContext.RequestContext);
var img = new TagBuilder("img");
img.Attributes.Add("src", VirtualPathUtility.ToAbsolute(imageSrc));
var anchor = new TagBuilder("a") { InnerHtml = img.ToString(TagRenderMode.SelfClosing) };
anchor.Attributes["href"] = urlHelper.Action(action, controller, routeValues);
anchor.MergeAttributes(new RouteValueDictionary(htmlAttributes));
return MvcHtmlString.Create(anchor.ToString());
}
}
}
and use it in View:
@using MyApplication.Helpers;
@Html.ImageActionLink("LinkText","ActionName","ControllerName",null,null,"~/images/untitled.png")
Output HTML:
<a href="/ControllerName/ActionName">
<img src="/images/untitled.png">
</a>
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