Skip to content

Ducki/ActiveTagHelper

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

18 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

ActiveTagHelper

Nuget

Adds active class to your links (like menu items, or a tags, but it actually works on every tag) based on whether its asp-page, asp-controller or asp-action matches the current URL.

It's easy – just add a little attribute to your links. This is how:

Compatibility

Currently only tested on .NET 6.

Installation

  1. Add a reference to the package from the cmd line:
    MyProject> dotnet add package ActiveTagHelper
    
  2. Restore:
    MyProject> dotnet restore
    
  3. Register the Tag Helpers in your application's _ViewImports.cshtml file:
    @addTagHelper *, ActiveTagHelper
    

To use it, you have two possibilities:

Add check-active attribute to your links

Every link that should have its destination and current route compared needs to get the check-active attribute.

Example

<a check-active asp-page="/Index">Index</a>
<a check-active asp-page="/Privacy">Privacy</a>

When the user is on the Index page, the code gets automatically changed to:

<a class="active" asp-page="/Index">Index</a>
<a asp-page="/Privacy">Privacy</a>

If there are already classes defined, active just gets appended to the existing ones. The check-active attribute always gets removed.

By the way, this works on every HTML element, not just <a>.

Set custom trigger css class instead of check-active attribute

You can also use a css class as a trigger. For example, here we use a class nav-link as a trigger class, because we already have it as a distinguishing feature of navigation links. Thus, we can leave out the check-active attribute and leverage that class. Set it up in your Program.cs where you create your builder:

var builder = WebApplication.CreateBuilder(args);
builder.Services.AddRazorPages();

builder.MapActiveTagHelperClass(o => o.TriggerClass = "nav-link"); // <- this is us!

var app = builder.Build();
// […]

Example

<a class="nav-link" asp-page="/Index">Index</a>
<a class="nav-link" asp-page="/Privacy">Privacy</a>

When the user is on the Index page, the code gets automatically changed to:

<a class="nav-link active" asp-page="/Index">Index</a>
<a class="nav-link" asp-page="/Privacy">Privacy</a>

Optional: set custom active class

You can change the name of the active CSS class by setting a custom class in your host builder setup. The tag exposes a MapActiveTagHelperClass method in the WebApplicationBuilder object.

For example:

var builder = WebApplication.CreateBuilder(args);
builder.Services.AddRazorPages();

builder.MapActiveTagHelperClass(o => o.CssClass = "my-custom-class"); // <-- this sets your own class

var app = builder.Build();
// […]

Changelog

1.0.0

Initial

1.0.1

Added support for custom css class

1.1.0

Added possibility to have custom css class as trigger instead of attribute

About

ASP.NET Core TagHelper that adds 'active' class to links on current route.

Resources

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages