in my opinion the second way is more convenient.
Yeah in my opinion as well.
In both case How Can I upload this images in html form?
Pretty easy. As always in an ASP.NET MVC application you start by designing a view model:
public class MyViewModel
{
[Required]
public HttpPostedFileBase File { get; set; }
}
then you could have a controller with 2 actions (one rendering the view and another handling the file upload):
public class HomeController: Controller
{
public ActionResult Index()
{
return View(new MyViewModel());
}
[HttpPost]
public ActionResult Index(MyViewModel model)
{
if (!ModelState.IsValid)
{
// the user didn't upload any file =>
// render the same view again in order to display the error message
return View(model);
}
// at this stage the model is valid =>
// you could handle the file upload here
// let's generate a filename to store the file on the server
var fileName = Guid.NewGuid().ToString() + Path.GetFileName(file.FileName);
var path = Path.Combine(Server.MapPath("~/App_Data"), fileName);
// store the uploaded file on the file system
file.SaveAs(path);
// TODO: now you could store the path in your database
// and finally return some ActionResult
// to inform the user that the upload process was successful
return Content("Thanks for uploading. Your file has been successfully stored on our server");
}
}
and finally you will have a corresponding strongly typed view that will contgain the form to upload the file:
@model MyViewModel
@using (Html.BeginForm(null, null, FormMethod.Post, new { enctype = "multipart/form-data" }))
{
<div>
@Html.LabelFor(x => x.File)
@Html.TextBoxFor(x => x.File, new { type = "file" })
@Html.ValidationMessageFor(x => x.File)
</div>
<button type="sybmit">Upload</button>
}
Also I would recommend you reading Phil Haack's blog post
that illustrates file uploading in ASP.NET MVC works.
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