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Version: v1.1

πŸ““ 3.2.0.10 Introduction to Controllers, Routes and URLs

Now that we can successfully run a project, we're ready to start building our application out further. We'll start by adding a new controller file. This file's job is to receive the requests a user will send the server and return the correct corresponding information to display in the browser.

Writing a Controller​


If you followed along with the previous lessons, you already have a subdirectory called Controllers within the production directory FriendLetter. If not, add one now. Having a Controllers subdirectory is standard convention within Model-View-Controller (MVC) frameworks. We'll add a file called HomeController.cs to within the Controllers subdirectory.

The resulting structure for our Controllers directory and HomeController file should look like this:

FriendLetter.Solution └── FriendLetter └── Controllers └── HomeController.cs

Let's add code to our new controller file:

FriendLetter/Controllers/HomeController.cs
using Microsoft.AspNetCore.Mvc;

namespace FriendLetter.Controllers
{
public class HomeController : Controller
{

}
}

We add a using statement that imports functionality from the ASP.NET Core MVC package listed in our .csproj file. This line imports the Microsoft.AspNetCore.Mvc namespace into our controller, so we have access to ASP.NET Core's built in Controller class. We'll see why we need access in just a moment.

Then we add a FriendLetter.Controllers namespace with a class called HomeController inside of it.

Notice this syntax:

class HomeController : Controller

By adding : Controller to our HomeController class, we tell our program that HomeController should inherit or extend functionality from ASP.NET Core's built-in Controller class that we import with our using statement.

Routes​


Let's add a route to our new HomeController class.

FriendLetter/Controllers/HomeController.cs
using Microsoft.AspNetCore.Mvc;

namespace FriendLetter.Controllers
{
public class HomeController : Controller
{

public string Hello() { return "Hello friend!"; }

}
}

The Hello() method represents a route in our application. As we discussed in the Uniform Resource Locators (URLS) lesson:

The path consists of one or more segments separated by slashes. It provides a name for identifying the specific resource requested.

For instance, we can see all courses on LearnHowToProgram.com by visiting this URL:

https://old.learnhowtoprogram.com/courses

In this example, /courses is the path.

How does this relate to our Hello() method? Because the Hello() method is a route, it will create a special path, or pattern, in our application. If we were to host this application at old.learnhowtoprogram.com, we'd have the following route because of the Hello() method in our Home controller:

old.learnhowtoprogram.com/home/hello

The path is the portion appended to the end of the homepage URL:

/home/hello
  • The first part of the path /home corresponds to the name of our controller HomeController.

  • The second part /hello corresponds to the name of our route method Hello().

  • If we were to host our application at old.learnhowtoprogram.com, the Hello() method in HomeController will run when a user navigates to old.learnhowtoprogram.com/home/hello.

  • If we revisit our /home/hello route, we see it returns the string "Hello friend!". This is called the action, because it defines what the site will do when a client requests this particular path.

Invoking Routes​


We can launch our application by running dotnet run in the production directory of our project: FriendLetter.Solution/FriendLetter. If the project doesn't have obj and bin subdirectories, these will be created in the process of running the app with dotnet run, since that command restores and builds the project before running it.

Now we can navigate to the following URL in the browser:

http://localhost:5000/home/hello

The message "Hello friend!" will appear. Let's discuss exactly what's happening here.

  • When a client like a web browser makes a request to our server, it must include the URL it's requesting. In the example above, the URL contains a /home/hello path.

  • Our server looks at the HomeController because it matches the first /home portion of the URL path.

  • In order to find the more specific /home/hello data, our server looks for a Hello() method in the HomeController.

  • The server provides our client with a response. In this case, our Hello() method returns the string "Hello friend!".

  • Our client receives the response and renders the resources in the browser. We see "Hello friend!" appear on the page.

More Routes​


Let’s add another route to a page that says "Goodbye friend!". Open HomeController.cs and add the following:

FriendLetter/Controllers/HomeController.cs
using Microsoft.AspNetCore.Mvc;

namespace FriendLetter.Controllers
{
public class HomeController : Controller
{

public string Hello() { return "Hello friend!"; }

public string Goodbye() { return "Goodbye friend."; }

}
}

Now we can navigate to:

localhost:5000/home/goodbye

This time we should see "Goodbye friend."

In the next lesson, we'll discuss how to further customize the URL paths that match up with specific routes.