This change restores a link generation behavior from MVC5 and earlier where 'action' and 'controller' values are special cased-when using Url.Action(...). The change is that in-effect 'action' and 'controller' are always included in the route values given to the routing system. Passing a null value into the Url.Action(...) method means that the ambient value for that token should be used explicitly. This means that the 'action' and 'controller' tokens become sticky, even when something to the lexical left in the URL (like area) changes. |
||
|---|---|---|
| samples | ||
| src | ||
| test | ||
| .gitattributes | ||
| .gitignore | ||
| .travis.yml | ||
| CONTRIBUTING.md | ||
| LICENSE.txt | ||
| Mvc.NoFun.sln | ||
| Mvc.sln | ||
| NuGet.Config | ||
| README.md | ||
| Settings.StyleCop | ||
| appveyor.yml | ||
| build.cmd | ||
| build.sh | ||
| global.json | ||
| makefile.shade | ||
README.md
ASP.NET MVC
ASP.NET MVC gives you a powerful, patterns-based way to build dynamic websites that enables a clean separation of concerns and gives you full control over markup for enjoyable, agile development. ASP.NET MVC includes many features that enable fast, TDD-friendly development for creating sophisticated applications that use the latest web standards.
ASP.NET MVC in ASP.NET 5 includes support for building web pages and HTTP services in a single aligned framework that can be hosted in IIS or self-hosted in your own process.
This project is part of ASP.NET 5. You can find samples, documentation and getting started instructions for ASP.NET 5 at the Home repo.