Ends in:
3 DAYS
6 HRS
32 MIN
57 SEC
Ends in:
3 D
6 H
32 M
57 S

Page Toolbar Extensions for ASP.NET Core UI

Page toolbar system allows you to add components to the toolbar of any page. The page toolbar is the area right to the header of a page. A button ("Import users from excel") was added to the user management page below:

page-toolbar-button

You can add any type of view component item to the page toolbar or modify existing items.

How to Set Up

In this example, we will add an "Import users from excel" button and execute a JavaScript code for the user management page of the Identity Module.

Add a New Button to the User Management Page

Write the following code inside the ConfigureServices of your web module class:

Configure<AbpPageToolbarOptions>(options =>
{
    options.Configure<Volo.Abp.Identity.Web.Pages.Identity.Users.IndexModel>(toolbar =>
    {
        toolbar.AddButton(
            LocalizableString.Create<MyProjectNameResource>("ImportFromExcel"),
            icon: "file-import",
            id: "ImportUsersFromExcel",
            type: AbpButtonType.Secondary
        );
    });
});

AddButton is a shortcut to simply add a button component. Note that you need to add the ImportFromExcel to your localization dictionary (json file) to localize the text.

When you run the application, you will see the button added next to the current button list. There are some other parameters of the AddButton method (for example, use order to set the order of the button component relative to the other components).

Create a JavaScript File

Now, we can go to the client side to handle click event of the new button. First, add a new JavaScript file to your solution. We added inside the /Pages/Identity/Users folder of the .Web project:

user-action-extension-on-solution

Here, the content of this JavaScript file:

$(function () {
    $('#ImportUsersFromExcel').click(function (e) {
        e.preventDefault();
        alert('TODO: import users from excel');
    });
});

In the click event, you can do anything you need to do.

Add the File to the User Management Page

Then you need to add this JavaScript file to the user management page. You can take the power of the Bundling & Minification system.

Write the following code inside the ConfigureServices of your module class:

Configure<AbpBundlingOptions>(options =>
{
    options.ScriptBundles.Configure(
        typeof(Volo.Abp.Identity.Web.Pages.Identity.Users.IndexModel).FullName,
        bundleConfiguration =>
        {
            bundleConfiguration.AddFiles(
                "/Pages/Identity/Users/my-user-extensions.js"
            );
        });
});

This configuration adds my-user-extensions.js to the user management page of the Identity Module. typeof(Volo.Abp.Identity.Web.Pages.Identity.Users.IndexModel).FullName is the name of the bundle in the user management page. This is a common convention used for all the ABP Commercial modules.

Advanced Use Cases

While you typically want to add a button action to the page toolbar, it is possible to add any type of component.

Add View Component to a Page Toolbar

First, create a new view component in your project:

page-toolbar-custom-component

For this example, we've created a MyToolbarItem view component under the /Pages/Identity/Users/MyToolbarItem folder.

MyToolbarItemViewComponent.cs content:

public class MyToolbarItemViewComponent : AbpViewComponent
{
    public IViewComponentResult Invoke()
    {
        return View("~/Pages/Identity/Users/MyToolbarItem/Default.cshtml");
    }
}

Default.cshtml content:

<span>
    <button type="button" class="btn btn-dark">CLICK ME</button>
</span>
  • .cshtml file can contain any type of component(s). It is a typical view component.
  • MyToolbarItemViewComponent can inject and use any service if you need.

Then you can add the MyToolbarItemViewComponent to the user management page:

Configure<AbpPageToolbarOptions>(options =>
{
    options.Configure<Volo.Abp.Identity.Web.Pages.Identity.Users.IndexModel>(
        toolbar =>
        {
            toolbar.AddComponent<MyToolbarItemViewComponent>();
        }
    );
});
  • If your component accepts arguments (in the Invoke/InvokeAsync method), you can pass them to the AddComponent method as an anonymous object.

Permissions

If your button/component should be available based on a permission/policy, you can pass the permission/policy name as the requiredPolicyName parameter to the AddButton and AddComponent methods.

Add a Page Toolbar Contributor

If you perform advanced custom logic while adding an item to a page toolbar, you can create a class that implements the IPageToolbarContributor interface or inherits from the PageToolbarContributor class:

public class MyToolbarContributor : PageToolbarContributor
{
    public override Task ContributeAsync(PageToolbarContributionContext context)
    {
        context.Items.Insert(0, new PageToolbarItem(typeof(MyToolbarItemViewComponent)));

        return Task.CompletedTask;
    }
}
  • You can use context.ServiceProvider to resolve dependencies if you need.

Then add your class to the Contributors list:

Configure<AbpPageToolbarOptions>(options =>
{
    options.Configure<Volo.Abp.Identity.Web.Pages.Identity.Users.IndexModel>(
        toolbar =>
        {
            toolbar.Contributors.Add(new MyToolbarContributor());
        }
    );
});

Contributors


Last updated: January 01, 2021 Edit this page on GitHub

Was this page helpful?

Please make a selection.

To help us improve, please share your reason for the negative feedback in the field below.

Please enter a note.

Thank you for your valuable feedback!

Please note that although we cannot respond to feedback, our team will use your comments to improve the experience.

In this document
Community Talks

What’s New with .NET 9 & ABP 9?

21 Nov, 17:00
Online
Watch the Event
Mastering ABP Framework Book
Mastering ABP Framework

This book will help you gain a complete understanding of the framework and modern web application development techniques.

Learn More