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Can you overload controller methods in ASP.NET MVC?

I'm curious to see if you can overload controller methods in ASP.NET MVC. Whenever I try, I get the error below. The two methods accept different arguments. Is this something that cannot be done?

The current request for action 'MyMethod' on controller type 'MyController' is ambiguous between the following action methods:

@andy its the same for mvc 4 as well :)
And same for mvc 5
And same for mvc 6
And same for MVC Core 1.1
And same for MVC Core 2.0

J
JD Conley

You can use the attribute if you want your code to do overloading.

[ActionName("MyOverloadedName")]

But, you'll have to use a different action name for the same http method (as others have said). So it's just semantics at that point. Would you rather have the name in your code or your attribute?

Phil has an article related to this: http://haacked.com/archive/2008/08/29/how-a-method-becomes-an-action.aspx


The main downfall of using this and overloading your action is that it can no longer be rendered by the same view file.
Actually, it can still render the same view file. You just need to specify the name of the view instead of blindly calling return View();. For example: return View("MyOverloadedName");.
@JD but Microsoft says.. A method used as a controller action cannot be overloaded.. You can see it here..asp.net/mvc/tutorials/controllers-and-routing/…
t
tvanfosson

Yes. I've been able to do this by setting the HttpGet/HttpPost (or equivalent AcceptVerbs attribute) for each controller method to something distinct, i.e., HttpGet or HttpPost, but not both. That way it can tell based on the type of request which method to use.

[HttpGet]
public ActionResult Show()
{
   ...
}

[HttpPost]
public ActionResult Show( string userName )
{
   ...
}

One suggestion I have is that, for a case like this, would be to have a private implementation that both of your public Action methods rely on to avoid duplicating code.


With MVC2 and up one can also use the HttpPost/HttpGet attribute
@yohal Yes, that would be the canonical way to handle it now if you don't need to support multiple verbs.
Just beware not to abuse this to violate the principles of REST.
Pretty sure this is only working because your Show() methods have different signatures. If and when you need to send info into the Get version, your Get and Post versions then end up with the same signature, and you'd have need of the ActionName attribute or one of the other fixes mentioned in this post.
@ScottK.Fraley that's true. If they needed the same signature you'd have to name them differently and apply the ActionNameAttribute. In practice, I've rarely found that to be the case.
J
Josh

Here's something else you could do... you want a method that is able to have a parameter and not.

Why not try this...

public ActionResult Show( string username = null )
{
   ...
}

This has worked for me... and in this one method, you can actually test to see if you have the incoming parameter.


(string can't be nullable.)
string can be nullable. In fact, it is already nullable, just doesn't need the '?'
@ProfK - No, string is a reference type which can be null. It's not "nullable". Nullable means that you're using the Nullable (ie T?). Josh's point is that you can't put the ? after string because it's not a value type, and Nullable only accepts value types.
I randomly found my way back to this question and then realized I posted the comment above. No recollection of this...weird! It is still true that a string can't be nullable; but it can be null! Either way I posted the initial comment without sincerity.
S
Shivprasad Koirala

No,No and No. Go and try the controller code below where we have the "LoadCustomer" overloaded.

public class CustomerController : Controller
    {
        //
        // GET: /Customer/

        public ActionResult LoadCustomer()
        {
            return Content("LoadCustomer");
        }
        public ActionResult LoadCustomer(string str)
        {
            return Content("LoadCustomer with a string");
        }
    }

If you try to invoke the "LoadCustomer" action you will get error as shown in the below figure.

https://i.stack.imgur.com/Hvc7n.png

Polymorphism is a part of C# programming while HTTP is a protocol. HTTP does not understand polymorphism. HTTP works on the concept's or URL and URL can only have unique name's. So HTTP does not implement polymorphism.

In order to fix the same we need to use "ActionName" attribute.

public class CustomerController : Controller
    {
        //
        // GET: /Customer/

        public ActionResult LoadCustomer()
        {
            return Content("LoadCustomer");
        }

        [ActionName("LoadCustomerbyName")]
        public ActionResult LoadCustomer(string str)
        {
            return Content("LoadCustomer with a string");
        }
    }

So now if you make a call to URL "Customer/LoadCustomer" the "LoadCustomer" action will be invoked and with URL structure "Customer/LoadCustomerByName" the "LoadCustomer(string str)" will be invoked.

https://i.stack.imgur.com/rVByW.png

https://i.stack.imgur.com/1Tu2N.png

The above answer i have taken from this codeproject article --> MVC Action overloading


Thanks for this. I guess you may as well just use a different action name from the beginning rather than use the attribute.
@Dan but then we do not have polymorphism on the C# side.
You're correct, there's no controller method overloading but it's nothing to do with HTTP.
Thanks for clarification. +1. Should be thinking more HTTP and not C#. There's no reason to approach actions with an OO strategy.
I
Ian Mercer

To overcome this problem you can write an ActionMethodSelectorAttribute that examines the MethodInfo for each action and compares it to the posted Form values and then rejects any method for which the form values don't match (excluding the button name, of course).

Here's an example:- http://blog.abodit.com/2010/02/asp-net-mvc-ambiguous-match/

BUT, this isn't a good idea.


@Cerbrus because it's a horrible hack and the next person who looks at your controller code will be confused by a very non-standard approach.
Heh, fair enough.
k
keeney

As far as I know you can only have the same method when using different http methods.

i.e.

[AcceptVerbs("GET")]
public ActionResult MyAction()
{

}

[AcceptVerbs("POST")]
public ActionResult MyAction(FormResult fm)
{

}

the decorations have nothing to do with the overload. it the parameters list that allows overloading.
@SkySanders I disagree, the parameters-based overloading doesn't work in MVC controller methods - have you got a working example of it? Cheers.
Use the [HttpPost] attribute instead of [AcceptVerbs("POST")].
c
cookdn

I have achieved this with the help of Attribute Routing in MVC5. Admittedly I am new to MVC coming from a decade of web development using WebForms, but the following has worked for me. Unlike the accepted answer this allows all the overloaded actions to be rendered by the same view file.

First enable Attribute Routing in App_Start/RouteConfig.cs.

public class RouteConfig
{
    public static void RegisterRoutes(RouteCollection routes)
    {
        routes.IgnoreRoute("{resource}.axd/{*pathInfo}");

        routes.MapMvcAttributeRoutes();

        routes.MapRoute(
            name: "Default",
            url: "{controller}/{action}/{id}",
            defaults: new { controller = "Home", action = "Index", id = UrlParameter.Optional }
        );            
    }
}

Optionally decorate your controller class with a default route prefix.

[RoutePrefix("Returns")]
public class ReturnsController : BaseController
{
    //.......

Then decorate your controller actions that overload each other with a common route and parameters to suit. Using type constrained parameters you can use the same URI format with IDs of different types.

[HttpGet]
// Returns
public ActionResult Index()
{
    //.....
}

[HttpGet]
[Route("View")]
// Returns/View
public ActionResult View()
{
    // I wouldn't really do this but it proves the concept.
    int id = 7026;
    return View(id);
}

[HttpGet]
[Route("View/{id:int}")]
// Returns/View/7003
public ActionResult View(int id)
{
    //.....
}

[HttpGet]
[Route("View/{id:Guid}")]
// Returns/View/99300046-0ba4-47db-81bf-ba6e3ac3cf01
public ActionResult View(Guid id)
{
    //.....
}

Hope this helps and is not leading somebody down the wrong path. :-)


Nice work! I just ran into this issue, you saved me! I also have "x" years with WebForms - so still very much a learning curve. Cannot get a job without MVC now-a-days haha
D
DevDave

You could use a single ActionResult to deal with both Post and Get:

public ActionResult Example() {
   if (Request.HttpMethod.ToUpperInvariant() == "GET") {
    // GET
   }
   else if (Request.HttpMethod.ToUpperInvariant() == "POST") {
     // Post  
   }
}

Useful if your Get and Post methods have matching signatures.


Hmm, kind-a reinventing the wheel again, but this time in a square-like shape. Why not simply use [HttpPost/Get] attributes?
its been a while but I think I did this because MVC wasn't distinguishing between two separate methods with matching sigs. I was using the HttpPost attribute, though I wasn't putting HttpGet on the other method..
@DevDave as well as attributing both methods, be sure you're using attributes from system.web.mvc - and not the ones from system.web.http!
D
DvS

I've just come across this question and, even though it's quite old now, it's still very relevant. Ironically, the one correct comment in this thread was posted by a self-confessed beginner in MVC when he wrote the post. Even the ASP.NET docs are not entirely correct. I have a large project and I successfully overload action methods.

If one understands routing, beyond the simple {controller}/{action}/{id} default route pattern, it might be obvious that controller actions can be mapped using any unique pattern. Someone here talked about polymorphism and said: "HTTP does not understand polymorphism", but routing has nothing to do with HTTP. It is, simply put, a mechanism for string pattern matching.

The best way to make this work is to use the routing attributes, for example:

[RoutePrefix("cars/{country:length(3)}")]
public class CarHireController
{
    [Route("{location}/{page:int=1}", Name = "CarHireLocation")]
    public ActionResult Index(string country, string location, int page)
    {
        return Index(country, location, null, page);
    }

    [Route("{location}/{subLocation}/{page:int=1}", Name = "CarHireSubLocation")]
    public ActionResult Index(string country, string location, string subLocation, int page)
    {
        //The main work goes here
    }
}

These actions will take care of urls like /cars/usa/new-york and /cars/usa/texas/dallas, which will map to the first and second Index actions respectively.

Examining this example controller it's evident that it goes beyond the default route pattern mentioned above. The default works well if your url structure exactly matches your code naming conventions, but this is not always the case. Code should be descriptive of the domain, but urls often need to go further because their content should be based on other criteria, such as SEO requirements.

The benefit of the default routing pattern is that it automatically creates unique routes. This is enforced by the compiler since urls will match unique controller types and members. Rolling your own route patterns will require careful thought to ensure uniqueness and that they work.

Important note The one drawback is that using routing to generate urls for overloaded actions does not work when based on an action name, e.g., when using UrlHelper.Action. But it does work if one uses named routes, e.g., UrlHelper.RouteUrl. And using named routes is, according to well respected sources, the way to go anyhow (http://haacked.com/archive/2010/11/21/named-routes-to-the-rescue.aspx/).

Good luck!


A
Alex Butenko

You can use [ActionName("NewActionName")] to use the same method with a different name:

public class HomeController : Controller
{
    public ActionResult GetEmpName()
    {
        return Content("This is the test Message");
    }

    [ActionName("GetEmpWithCode")]
    public ActionResult GetEmpName(string EmpCode)
    {
        return Content("This is the test Messagewith Overloaded");
    }
}

K
Kasey Speakman

I needed an overload for:

public ActionResult Index(string i);
public ActionResult Index(int groupId, int itemId);

There were few enough arguments where I ended up doing this:

public ActionResult Index(string i, int? groupId, int? itemId)
{
    if (!string.IsNullOrWhitespace(i))
    {
        // parse i for the id
    }
    else if (groupId.HasValue && itemId.HasValue)
    {
        // use groupId and itemId for the id
    }
}

It's not a perfect solution, especially if you have a lot of arguments, but it works well for me.


ಅನಿಲ್

I have faced same issue in my application too. Without Modifiyig any Method information, I have provided [ActionName("SomeMeaningfulName")] on Action head. issue resolved

[ActionName("_EmployeeDetailsByModel")]
        public PartialViewResult _EmployeeDetails(Employee model)
        {
            // Some Operation                
                return PartialView(model);
            }
        }

[ActionName("_EmployeeDetailsByModelWithPagination")]
        public PartialViewResult _EmployeeDetails(Employee model,int Page,int PageSize)
        {

                // Some Operation
                return PartialView(model);

        }

A
Andiih

Create the base method as virtual

public virtual ActionResult Index()

Create the overridden method as override

public override ActionResult Index()

Edit: This obviously applies only if the override method is in a derived class which appears not to have been the OP's intention.


You're probably misunderstanding the question. The OP is asking about overloading the method in the same controller, not overriding it in a derived class.
@Andiih : what will happen if both method are in same controller?
C
Community

I like this answer posted in another thread

This is mainly used if you inherit from another controller and want to override an acction from the base controller

ASP.NET MVC - Overriding an action with differing parameters


M
Matt

There is only one public signature allowed for each controller method. If you try to overload it, it will compile, but you're getting the run-time error you've experienced.

If you're not willing to use different verbs (like the [HttpGet] and [HttpPost] attributes) to differentiate overloaded methods (which will work), or change the routing, then what remains is that you can either provide another method with a different name, or you can dispatch inside of the existing method. Here's how I did it:

I once came into a situation where I had to maintain backwards compatibility. The original method expected two parameters, but the new one had only one. Overloading the way I expected did not work because MVC didn't find the entry point any more.

To solve that, I did the following:

Changed the 2 overloaded action methods from public to private Created one new public method which contained "just" 2 string parameters. That one acted as a dispatcher, i.e.: public ActionResult DoSomething(string param1, string param2) { if (string.IsNullOrEmpty(param2)) { return DoSomething(ProductName: param1); } else { int oldId = int.Parse(param1); return DoSomething(OldParam: param1, OldId: oldId); } } private ActionResult DoSomething(string OldParam, int OldId) { // some code here return Json(result); } private ActionResult DoSomething(string ProductName) { // some code here return Json(result); }

Of course, this is a hack and should be refactored later. But for the time being, it worked for me.

You can also create a dispatcher like:

public ActionResult DoSomething(string action, string param1, string param2)
{
    switch (action)
    {
        case "update":
            return UpdateAction(param1, param2);
        case "remove":
            return DeleteAction(param1);
    }
}

You can see, that UpdateAction needs 2 parameters, while DeleteAction just needs one.


E
Eric Saboia

Sorry for the delay. I was with the same problem and I found a link with good answers, could that will help new guys

All credits for BinaryIntellect web site and the authors

Basically, there are four situations: using differents verbs, using routing, overload marking with [NoAction] attribute and change the action attribute name with [ActionName]

So, depends that's your requiriments and your situation.

Howsoever, follow the link:

Link: http://www.binaryintellect.net/articles/8f9d9a8f-7abf-4df6-be8a-9895882ab562.aspx


a
alanextar

This answer for those who struggling with the same issue. You can implement your own custom filter based on ActionMethodSelectorAttribute. Here I found the best solution for solving your question. Works fine on .net 5 project. If you try to implement the same logic as was in web api controllers then use Microsoft.AspNetCore.Mvc.WebApiCompatShim. This nuget package provides compatibility in ASP.NET Core MVC with ASP.NET Web API 2 to simplify migration of existing Web API implementations. Please check this answer but consider that starting with ASP.NET Core 3.0, the Microsoft.AspNetCore.Mvc.WebApiCompatShim package is no longer available.


P
Panos Roditakis

If this is an attempt to use one GET action for several views that POST to several actions with different models, then try add a GET action for each POST action that redirects to the first GET to prevent 404 on refresh.

Long shot but common scenario.