In previous ASP.NET MVC Tutorial, we discussed about different available options for passing data from Controller to View in ASP.NET MVC. We implemented passing data using ViewBag and ViewData in ASP.NETMVC application. Now, in this part of the tutorial, we are going to discuss about the third avai
In previous ASP.NET MVC Tutorial, we discussed about different available options for passing data from Controller to View in ASP.NET MVC. We implemented passing data using
ViewBag
and ViewData
in ASP.NETMVC application. Now, in this part of the tutorial, we are going to discuss about the third available option i.e.TempData
.TempData
in ASP.NET MVC is basically a dictionary object derived from TempDataDictionary
. TempData
stays for a subsequent HTTP Request as opposed to other options (ViewBag
and ViewData
) those stay only for current request. So, TempdData
can be used to maintain data between controller actions as well as redirects.
Note: Just like
ViewData
, typecasting and null checks required for TempData
also in order to avoid errors.
Let’s see how we can use
TempData
in a practical scenario to pass data from one controller action to another.
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//Controller Action 1 (TemporaryEmployee)
public ActionResult TemporaryEmployee()
{
Employee employee = new Employee
{
EmpID = "121",
EmpFirstName = "Imran",
EmpLastName = "Ghani"
};
TempData["Employee"] = employee;
return RedirectToAction("PermanentEmployee");
}
//Controller Action 2(PermanentEmployee)
public ActionResult PermanentEmployee()
{
Employee employee = TempData["Employee"] as Employee;
return View(employee);
}
As in above example, we store an employee object in
TempData
in Controller Action 1 (i.e.TemporaryEmployee
) and retrieve it in another Controller Action 2 (i.e. PermanentEmployee). But If we try to do the same using ViewBag
or ViewData
, we will get null in Controller Action 2 because only TempData
object maintains data between controller actions.
An important thing about
TempData
is that it stores contents in Session object. Then one may raise a question that “What’s the difference between TempData in ASP.NET MVC and Session?” or “Why we have TempData dictionary object?, Why can’t we use the Session object directly?”ASP.NET MVC TempData Vs Sessions
Although ASP.NET MVC TempData stores it’s content in Session state but it gets destroyed earlier than a session object. TempData gets destroyed immediately after it’s used in subsequent HTTP request, so no explicit action required. If we use a Session object for this purpose, we would have to destroy the object explicitly.
It’s best fit for scenarios when:
- we need to preserve data from current to subsequent request.
- passing error message to an error page.
With the above discussion on using TempData in ASP.NET MVC, we have successfully covered different options for passing data from Controller to View in ASP.NET MVC. Hopefully reader will have a better understanding of using ViewBag, ViewData and TempData in ASP.NET MVC.
Source from
http://www.codeproject.com/Articles/786603/Using-TempData-in-ASP-NET-MVC
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