Proper usage of .net MVC Html.CheckBoxFor

asp.net MvcCheckboxfor

asp.net Mvc Problem Overview


All I want to know is the proper syntax for the Html.CheckBoxFor HTML helper in ASP.NET MVC.

What I'm trying to accomplish is for the check-box to be initially checked with an ID value so I can reference it in the Controller to see if it's still checked or not.

Would below be the proper syntax?

@foreach (var item in Model.Templates) 
{ 
    <td> 
        @Html.CheckBoxFor(model => true, item.TemplateId) 
        @Html.LabelFor(model => item.TemplateName)
    </td> 
}

asp.net Mvc Solutions


Solution 1 - asp.net Mvc

That isn't the proper syntax

The first parameter is not checkbox value but rather view model binding for the checkbox hence:

@Html.CheckBoxFor(m => m.SomeBooleanProperty, new { @checked = "checked" });

The first parameter must identify a boolean property within your model (it's an Expression not an anonymous method returning a value) and second property defines any additional HTML element attributes. I'm not 100% sure that the above attribute will initially check your checkbox, but you can try. But beware. Even though it may work you may have issues later on, when loading a valid model data and that particular property is set to false.

The correct way

Although my proper suggestion would be to provide initialized model to your view with that particular boolean property initialized to true.

Property types

As per Asp.net MVC HtmlHelper extension methods and inner working, checkboxes need to bind to boolean values and not integers what seems that you'd like to do. In that case a hidden field could store the id.

Other helpers

There are of course other helper methods that you can use to get greater flexibility about checkbox values and behaviour:

@Html.CheckBox("templateId", new { value = item.TemplateID, @checked = true });

> Note: checked is an HTML element boolean property and not a value attribute which means that you can assign any value to it. The correct HTML syntax doesn't include any assignments, but there's no way of providing an anonymous C# object with undefined property that would render as an HTML element property.

Solution 2 - asp.net Mvc

By default, the below code will NOT generate a checked Check Box as model properties override the html attributes:

@Html.CheckBoxFor(m => m.SomeBooleanProperty, new { @checked = "checked" });

Instead, in your GET Action method, the following needs to be done:

model.SomeBooleanProperty = true;

The above will preserve your selection(If you uncheck the box) even if model is not valid(i.e. some error occurs on posting the form).

However, the following code will certainly generate a checked checkbox, but will not preserve your uncheck responses, instead make the checkbox checked every time on errors in form.

 @Html.CheckBox("SomeBooleanProperty", new { @checked = "checked" });

> UPDATE

//Get Method
   public ActionResult CreateUser(int id)
   {
        model.SomeBooleanProperty = true;         
   }

Above code would generate a checked check Box at starting and will also preserve your selection even on errors in form.

Solution 3 - asp.net Mvc

I was having a problem with ASP.NET MVC 5 where CheckBoxFor would not check my checkboxes on server-side validation failure even though my model clearly had the value set to true. My Razor markup/code looked like:

@Html.CheckBoxFor(model => model.MyBoolValue, new { @class = "mySpecialClass" } )

To get this to work, I had to change this to:

@{
    var checkboxAttributes = Model.MyBoolValue ?
        (object) new { @class = "mySpecialClass", @checked = "checked" } :
        (object) new { @class = "mySpecialClass" };
}
@Html.CheckBox("MyBoolValue", checkboxAttributes)

Solution 4 - asp.net Mvc

Place this on your model:

[DisplayName("Electric Fan")]
public bool ElectricFan { get; set; }

private string electricFanRate;

public string ElectricFanRate
{
    get { return electricFanRate ?? (electricFanRate = "$15/month"); }
    set { electricFanRate = value; }
}

And this in your cshtml:

<div class="row">
    @Html.CheckBoxFor(m => m.ElectricFan, new { @class = "" })
    @Html.LabelFor(m => m.ElectricFan, new { @class = "" })
    @Html.DisplayTextFor(m => m.ElectricFanRate)
</div>

Which will output this:

![MVC Output][1] [1]: http://i.stack.imgur.com/mONwY.png

If you click on the checkbox or the bold label it will check/uncheck the checkbox

Solution 5 - asp.net Mvc

None of the above answers worked for me when binding back on POST, until I added the following in CSHTML

<div class="checkbox c-checkbox">
    <label>
        <input type="checkbox" id="xPrinting" name="xPrinting" value="true"  @Html.Raw( Model.xPrinting ? "checked" : "")>
        <span class=""></span>Printing
    </label>
</div>


// POST: Index
        
[HttpPost]
public ActionResult Index([Bind(Include = "dateInHands,dateFrom,dateTo,pgStatus,gpStatus,vwStatus,freeSearch,xPrinting,xEmbroidery,xPersonalization,sortOrder,radioOperator")] ProductionDashboardViewModel model)
   

Solution 6 - asp.net Mvc

I was looking for the solution to show the label dynamically from database like this:

checkbox1 : Option 1 text from database
checkbox2 : Option 2 text from database
checkbox3 : Option 3 text from database
checkbox4 : Option 4 text from database

So none of the above solution worked for me so I used like this:

 @Html.CheckBoxFor(m => m.Option1, new { @class = "options" }) 
 <label for="Option1">@Model.Option1Text</label>

 @Html.CheckBoxFor(m => m.Option2, new { @class = "options" }) 
 <label for="Option2">@Mode2.Option1Text</label>

In this way when user will click on label, checkbox will be selected.

Might be it can help someone.

Solution 7 - asp.net Mvc

I had trouble getting this to work and added another solution for anyone wanting/ needing to use FromCollection.

Instead of:

@Html.CheckBoxFor(model => true, item.TemplateId) 

Format html helper like so:

@Html.CheckBoxFor(model => model.SomeProperty, new { @class = "form-control", Name = "SomeProperty"})

Then in the viewmodel/model wherever your logic is:

public void Save(FormCollection frm)
{	
	// to do instantiate object.
	
	instantiatedItem.SomeProperty = (frm["SomeProperty"] ?? "").Equals("true", StringComparison.CurrentCultureIgnoreCase);
	
	// to do and save changes in database.
}

Attributions

All content for this solution is sourced from the original question on Stackoverflow.

The content on this page is licensed under the Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-SA 4.0) license.

Content TypeOriginal AuthorOriginal Content on Stackoverflow
Questionsagesky36View Question on Stackoverflow
Solution 1 - asp.net MvcRobert KoritnikView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 2 - asp.net MvcT GuptaView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 3 - asp.net MvcKirk LiemohnView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 4 - asp.net MvcJames GrayView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 5 - asp.net MvcCraig TromblyView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 6 - asp.net MvcAli AdraviView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 7 - asp.net Mvcuser3956566View Answer on Stackoverflow