93

I want to check the URL parameter in my Razor markup. For example, how do I do something like this:

<div id="wrap" class="@{if (URL "IFRAME" PARAMETER EQUALS 1) iframe-page}">
4

7 回答 7

145

Similar thread

<div id="wrap" class=' @(ViewContext.RouteData.Values["iframe"] == 1 ? /*do sth*/ : /*do sth else*/')> </div>

EDIT 01-10-2014: Since this question is so popular this answer has been improved.

The example above will only get the values from RouteData, so only from the querystrings which are caught by some registered route. To get the querystring value you have to get to the current HttpRequest. Fastest way is by calling (as TruMan pointed out) `Request.Querystring' so the answer should be:

<div id="wrap" class=' @(Request.QueryString["iframe"] == 1 ? /*do sth*/ : /*do sth else*/')> </div>

You can also check RouteValues vs QueryString MVC?

EDIT 03-05-2019: Above solution is working for .NET Framework.
As others pointed out if you would like to get query string value in .NET Core you have to use Query object from Context.Request path. So it would be:

<div id="wrap" class=' @(Context.Request.Query["iframe"] == new StringValues("1") ? /*do sth*/ : /*do sth else*/')> </div>

Please notice I am using StringValues("1") in the statement because Query returns StringValues struct instead of pure string. That's cleanes way for this scenerio which I've found.

于 2012-06-28T16:03:58.337 回答
40

If you are using .net core 2.0 this would be:

Context.Request.Query["id"]

Sample usage:

<a href="@Url.Action("Query",new {parm1=Context.Request.Query["queryparm1"]})">GO</a>
于 2018-01-31T09:01:18.280 回答
13

It was suggested to post this as an answer, because some other answers are giving errors like 'The name Context does not exist in the current context'.

Just using the following works:

Request.Query["queryparm1"]

Sample usage:

<a href="@Url.Action("Query",new {parm1=Request.Query["queryparm1"]})">GO</a>
于 2018-04-07T14:21:45.990 回答
9

Noneof the answers worked for me, I was getting "'HttpRequestBase' does not contain a definition for 'Query'", but this did work:

HttpContext.Current.Request.QueryString["index"]
于 2018-04-22T00:10:34.447 回答
6

for ASP.NET Core 5.0

You can get query parameters by injecting IHttpContextAccessor into the Razor page. And get the value of any parameter with Request.Query object.

Sample URL => https://localhost:44326/?MyParam=MyValue

Index.cshtml:

@inject Microsoft.AspNetCore.Http.IHttpContextAccessor HttpContextAccessor

<span>@HttpContextAccessor.HttpContext.Request.Query["MyParam"][0]</span>

Note that there maybe several query parameters with the same name therefore the values are stored in a collection.

于 2021-04-05T14:34:15.657 回答
5

I think a more elegant solution is to use the controller and the ViewData dictionary:

//Controller:
public ActionResult Action(int IFRAME)
    {
        ViewData["IsIframe"] = IFRAME == 1;
        return View();
    }

//view
@{
    string classToUse = (bool)ViewData["IsIframe"] ? "iframe-page" : "";
   <div id="wrap" class='@classToUse'></div>
 }
于 2012-06-28T15:41:40.027 回答
1

For Asp.net Core 2

ViewContext.ModelState["id"].AttemptedValue
于 2018-10-17T12:41:39.807 回答