Tag Helpers In ASP.NET Core 1.0

This blog is for those who would like to use Tag Helpers over old Razor/HTML helpers. Tag Helpers, another new feature of ASP.NET Core.

 Let’s quickly have a look at it.

What are Tag Helpers

As per ASP.NET documentation:

"Tag Helpers enable server-side code to participate in creating and rendering HTML elements in Razor files".

Tag Helpers are somewhat similar to HTML Helpers/Razor Helpers introduced in previous version of ASP.NET MVC but those helpers were not that easy to understand for web designers because of inline C# method calls. As web designers are more inclined towards HTML, a simple and comfortable approach was required. Fortunately, ASP.NET Core 1.0 provided that. Now one need not to use HTML Helpers to build cshtml forms. Means when you had to write this:

Action link

Now you can write this:

Action

As you can see above format is very easy to understand as it is purely a HTML syntax.

How Tag Helpers work?

When you create a new ASP.NET web application in Visual Studio, it adds Microsoft.AspNet.Tooling.Razor to the project.json file. This is the package that adds Tag Helper tooling and enables intelli Sense in Visual Studio. In order to make our Razor views aware of Tag Helpers, a special file named _ViewImports.cshtml is used. This file is stored in Views folder. By default this file will be there. By any chance if file is not there, then create and add the following line in it:

Add helper

Pre-defined Tag Helpers

ASP.NET Core 1.0 includes a list of pre-defined Tag Helpers:
  • Anchor: Generates hyperlink
  • Input: Generates input elements
  • Select: Generates dropdownlist
  • Cache: Manages partial page caching
  • Form: Generates form element
  • Script: Processes script tag
  • Link: Processes link element
  • Label: Outputs label element
  • Option: Targets individual options in a list
  • TextArea: Processes text area tag
  • Environment: Controls rendering of content
  • ValidationMessage: Generates validation error
  • ValidationSummary: Provides validation summary message

I’ll try to brief about all above Tag Helpers in coming posts. Now what if existing tags doesn't fulfill our need? In that case, we have to go ahead and invent something else. Should we proceed to create Tag Helper based on our requirement?

Creating Custom Tag Helpers

As part of this article, we will create a new Tag Helper for appreciating someone. Our tag will be <appreciate>. For example:

  1. <appreciate person-name-for-appreciation="shweta"></appreciate>  
The server will use appreciate Tag Helper to convert that markup into the following:
  1. <label>Great Work, Shweta</label>  
In order to create this new Tag Helper, we have to create a new class named AppreciateTagHelper and inherit TagHelper in that. Make sure to add the reference of Microsoft.AspNet.Razor.TagHelpersin this new class. Sample code is as in the following:

Code

Note: It is not mandatory to suffix TagHelper in class name. It is just a good practice.

To make this Tag Helper available to all Razor views, we have to add addTagHelper directive to _ViewImports.cshtml file as:
  1. @addTagHelper "*,CustomTagHelper"  
Above statement signifies that all the custom Tag Helpers (denoted by wild card character) will be available from assembly named CustomTagHelper. If interested, instead of * you can go with fully qualified names also.

Next step is to update our views. Let’s go ahead and append below line in view:
  1. <appreciate person-name-for-appreciation="shweta"></appreciate>  
Good thing is, you will get intelliSense for your custom Tag Helper also.

Run your application and you will find that appreciate Tag Helper is replaced with your label markup with output as:

Run Code

Hope you enjoyed this new feature.

 

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