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ASP.NET MVC Hosting UK - HostForLIFE.eu :: How to Create ASPPDF Application with Classic ASP Hosting ?

clock November 7, 2014 08:29 by author Peter

ASPPDF is an active server part written by Persists package INC. With this part you'll dynamically produce, browse and modify portable Document Format (PDF) files. PDF is the de-facto world-wide commonplace for making and exchanging platform-independent printable documents. Giving your ASP.NET MVC / ASP.Net-based web applications the power to come up with and modify PDF documents on the fly opens endless opportunities for you and your users. Our initial application can produce a one-page PDF document, set its Title and Creator properties, and draw the phrase "Hello, World!" in giant helvetica letters across the page.

VBScript
Set Pdf = Server.CreateObject("Persits.Pdf")
Set Doc = Pdf.CreateDocument
Doc.Title = "ASPPDF Chapter 3 Hello World Sample"
Doc.Creator = "Peter"
Set Page = Doc.Pages.Add
Set Font = Doc.Fonts("Helvetica")
Params = "x=0; y=650; width=612; alignment=center; size=50"
Page.Canvas.DrawText "Hello World!", Params, Font
Filename = Doc.Save( Server.MapPath("hello.pdf"), False )
Response.Write "Success! Download your PDF file <A HREF=" & Filename & ">here</A>"

C#
IPdfManager objPdf = new PdfManager();
IPdfDocument objDoc = objPdf.CreateDocument(Missing.Value);
objDoc.Title = "ASPPDF Chapter 3 Hello World Sample";
objDoc.Creator = "Peter";
IPdfPage objPage = objDoc.Pages.Add(Missing.Value, Missing.Value, Missing.Value);
IPdfFont objFont = objDoc.Fonts["Helvetica", Missing.Value];
String strParams = "x=0; y=650; width=612; alignment=center; size=50";
objPage.Canvas.DrawText( "Hello World!", strParams, objFont );
String strFilename = objDoc.Save( Server.MapPath("hello.pdf"), false );
lblResult.Text = "Success! Download your PDF file <A HREF=" + strFilename + ">here</A>";


The primary line creates an instance of the PdfManager object, ASPPDF's top-level object. the subsequent line creates an empty PdfDocument object. The Pdf.CreateDocument technique accepts one optional argument, a document ID string. If no ID is specified , ASPPDF can generate a random one automatically. The document ID argument isn't used.
Doc.Title = "ASPPDF Chapter 3 hello World Sample"
Doc.Creator = "Peter"

That 2 lines above, will set the document's Title and Creator. These values may be viewed in acrobat Reader below File/Document Properties/Summary. different document properties which will be set via the PdfDocument object include Subject, Author, Keywords, Producer, CreationDate and ModDate.
Set Page = Doc.Pages.Add

This line adds a new page to the document. The Pages.Add technique accepts 3 optional arguments: width, Height (in PDF units, one unit equals 1/72 of an inch) and InsertBefore that controls the location of the new page among existing page (not applicable if the document is at the start empty).

By default, the page width and height are 612 and 792, severally, that corresponds to the quality 8.5" x 11" size.

If InsertBefore is omitted, the new page is added to the end of the document. If present, it should be a 1-based index of an existing page within the document.
Set Font = Doc.Fonts("Helvetica")

This line queries the Doc.Fonts collection for a desired font. The default parameterized Fonts..Item property expects a font name as the initial parameter, and a CharSet code because the second optional parameter.
Params = "x=0; y=650; width=612; alignment=center; size=50"
Page.Canvas.DrawText "Hello World!", Params, Font

These 2 lines show the text "Hello World!" in size fifty helvetica on the page. (The auxiliary string variable Params is used for readability functions only. The second argument to Canvas.DrawText might even be an initialized PdfParam object.)

Besides the text and font arguments, 5 numeric arguments are being passed to the DrawText technique. X and Y are always needed, the others are optional in most cases. during this case, text alignment is set to center that makes the width parameter required also.

Filename = Doc.Save( Server.MapPath("hello.pdf"), False )

This line saves the document to disk. the primary argument is required and should be set to a full file path. The second argument is optional. If set to True or omitted, it instructs the Save technique to write an existing file. If set to False, it forces distinctive file name generation. as an example, if the file hello.pdf already exists within the specified  directory and another document is being saved below the same name, the Save technique tries the filenames hello(1).pdf, hello(2).pdf, etc., till a non-existent name is found. The Save method returns the filename (without the path) below that the file was saved.

 



ASP.NET MVC 5 Hosting UK - HostForLIFE.eu :: Using the ASP.NET MVC 5 Filter Overrides Feature

clock October 28, 2014 09:04 by author Peter

In the previous post we took a glance at the new authentication filter and its strong points. There's an extra new filter that has been free with ASP.NET MVC 5 Hosting that was requested by several developers out their over a protracted time. This can be the new filter override feature! Within the previous versions of MVC, there was no thanks to override a filter for simply one action or controller. What you had to do is to use the filter for every and each action and controller one by one and this was an enormous waste of development time. Rather than doing this developers found ways to implement filter overrides using workaround. But usually the usage of workarounds cause the lack of code consistency. Therefore as an answer for this, Filter Overrides feature was introduced in MVC 5.

Filter Overrides in action

Imagine a situation where you want to exclude a globally applied authorization filter just only for a single action method. This was one thing you may not implement easily with the previous versions of MVC. however now the MVC 5 Filter Overrides feature provides you this capability with few lines of code. Lets have a glance at the following code snippet:

[Authorize(Users = "Admin")]
public class HomeController : Controller
{
    public ActionResult Index()
    {
        return View();
    }
    public ActionResult About()
    {
        ViewBag.Message = "Your application description page.";
        return View();
    }
    public ActionResult Contact()
    {
        ViewBag.Message = "Your contact page.";
        return View();
    }
}

As you'll see AuthorizeAttribute has been embellished to the HomeController class with the user ‘Admin’. so it applies to all or any the actions within the controller. Assume you would like to bypass this filter only for the ‘About’ action. you would like to provide access to ‘About’ page just for user ‘Peter’ only. In MVC 5 you'll achieve this by adding 2 lines of code as illustrated in the following code snip.

 

OK. That’s it. currently all the actions inside the home Controller will only be accessed by ‘Admin’ except the ‘About’ action. The ‘About’ action is merely accessible for ‘Peter’. therefore now you'll get eliminate the headache of applying filters for every and each action wherever you would like to exclude only one or 2 actions.

There are 5 kinds of override filters accessible for every of filter types:

  1.     OverrideActionFilters
  2.     OverrideAuthentication
  3.     OverrideAuthorization
  4.     OverrideExceptionFilters
  5.     OverrideResultFilters

You will use the relevant override filters where is required.

Filter Override Bug Workaround

For making a bug workaround you'll have to do some of things:
Implement a custom class that may inherit from the action filter that you just wish to override and implement the IOverrideFilter. You’ll have to implement the FiltersToOverride property wherever you have got to identify the filters that you wish to override. for example lets create an easy workaround for the instance that has been described above:
public class MyOverrideAuthorizeAttribute : AuthorizeAttribute, IOverrideFilter
{
    public Type FiltersToOverride
    {
        get
        {
            return typeof(IAuthorizationFilter);
        }
    }
}

Then, the Controller implementation will change to:
[Authorize(Users = "Admin")]
public class HomeController : Controller
{
    public ActionResult Index()
    {
        return View();
    }
    [MyOverrideAuthorize(Users = "Peter")]
    public ActionResult About()
    {
        ViewBag.Message = "Your application description page.";
        return View();
    }
    public ActionResult Contact()
    {
        ViewBag.Message = "Your contact page.";
        return View();
    }
}



European ASP.NET MVC 5 Hosting - UK :: Tips Improving Your ASP.NET MVC Codebase

clock October 27, 2014 10:05 by author Scott

Some of you sometimes think why your application eat up until 1 GB-2GB memory on production server. After looking through the code, doing some profiling, maybe shaking your head a bit, you've figured out what the issue is and now you need to give some feedback.

In this tutorial, I will show some tips that you can follow to reduce your memory usage on production server and keep your ASP.NET MVC codebase working as you’d expect.

1. Understand the queries in your problem domain

The root cause of the support ticket I received was a simple case of fetching too much data from the database, causing obscene amounts of memory usage.

It's a common enough issue. You're building a simple blog, it has posts and it has media (images, videos, attachments). You put a Media array onto your Post domain object. Your Media domain object has all the image data stored in a byte array. Since you're using an ORM, there's a certain way you need to design your domain model to play nice; we've all experienced this.

public class BlogPost {
    public ICollection<BlogMedia> Media { get; set; }
}
public class BlogMedia {
    public byte[] Data { get; set; }
    public string Name { get; set; }
}

There's nothing absolutely wrong with this design. You've modeled your domain accurately. The problem is, when you issue a query through your favorite ORM, it eagerly loads all the data associated with your blog post:

public IList<BlogPost> GetNewestPosts(int take) {
    return _db.BlogPosts.OrderByDescending(p => p.PostDate).Take(take).ToList();
}

A seemingly innocuous line (unless you've been bitten), a sneaky monster is lying in wait with big consequences if you haven't disabled lazy loading or didn't tell your ORM to ignore that big Data property on blog media.

It's important to understand how your ORM queries and maps objects and make sure you only query what you need (for example using projection).

public IList<PostSummary> GetNewestPosts(int take) {
    return _db.BlogPosts.OrderByDescending(p => p.PostDate).Take(take).Select(p => new PostSummary() {
        Title = p.Title,
        Id = p.Id
    }).ToList();
}

This ensures we only grab the amount of data we really need for the task.

It's OK to have more than 5 methods on a repository; be as granular as you need to be for your UI.

2. Don't call your repositories from your views

Consider this line in an MVC view:

@foreach(var post in Model.RelatedPosts) {
    ...
}

It seems innocent enough. But if we take a look at what exactly that model property is hiding:

public class MyViewModel {

    public IList<BlogPost> RelatedPosts {
        get { return new BlogRepository().GetRelatedPosts(this.Tags); }
    }

}

Your "view model" has business logic in it on top of calling a data access method directly. Now you've introduced data access code somewhere it doesn't belong and hidden it inside a property. Move that into the controller so you can wrangle it in and populate the view model conciously.

This is a good opportunity to point out that implementing proper unit tests would uncover issues like this; because you definitely can't intercept calls to something like that and then you'd realize injecting a repository into a view model is probably not something you want to be doing.

3. Use partials and child actions to your advantage

If you need to perform business logic in a view, that should be a sign you need to revisit your view model and logic. I don't think it's advisable to do this in your MVC Razor view:

@{
    var blogController = new BlogController();
}

<ul>
@foreach(var tag in blogController.GetTagsForPost(p.Id)) {
    <li>@tag.Name</li>
}
</ul>

Putting business logic in the view is a no-no, but on top of that you're creating acontroller! Move that into your action method and use that view model you made for what it's intended for. You can also move that logic into a separate action method that only gets called inside views so you can cache it separately if needed.

//In the controller:

[ChildActionOnly]
[OutputCache(Duration=2000)]
public ActionResult TagsForPost(int postId) {
    return View();
}

//In the view:

@{Html.RenderAction("TagsForPost", new { postId = p.Id });}

Notice the ChildActionOnly attribute. From MSDN:

Any method that is marked with ChildActionOnlyAttribute can be called only with the Action or RenderAction HTML extension methods.

This means people can't see your child action by manipulating the URL (if you're using the default route).

Partial views and child actions are useful tools in the MVC arsenal; use them to your advantage!

4. Cache what matters

Given the code smells above, what do you think will happen if you only cached your view model?

public ActionResult Index() {
    var homepageViewModel = HttpContext.Current.Cache["homepageModel"] as HomepageViewModel;

    if (homepageViewModel == null) {
        homepageViewModel = new HomepageViewModel();
        homepageViewModel.RecentPosts = _blogRepository.GetNewestPosts(5);

        HttpContext.Current.Cache.Add("homepageModel", homepageViewModel, ...);

    }

    return View(homepageViewModel);
}

Nothing! There will not be any performance gain because you're accessing the data layer through a controller variable in the view and through a property in the view model... caching the view model won't help anything.

Instead, consider caching the output of the MVC action instead:

[OutputCache(Duration=2000)]
public ActionResult Index() {
    var homepageViewModel = new HomepageViewModel();

    homepageViewModel.RecentPosts = _blogRepository.GetNewestPosts(5);

    return View(homepageViewModel);
}

Notice the handy OutputCache attribute. MVC supports ASP.NET Output Caching; use it to your advantage when it applies. If you are going to cache the model, your model needs to essentially be a POCO with automatic (and read-only) properties... not something that calls other repository methods.

Conclusion

I hope with tutorial above, it will help you to minimize your memory usage on the server.

 



ASP.NET MVC 5 Hosting UK - HostForLIFE.eu :: How to Easily Add ASP.NET MVC Anti-Forgery Tokens to any or all Post Requests

clock October 24, 2014 07:35 by author Peter

Today, I will show you How to Easily Add ASP.NET MVC 5 Anti-Forgery Tokens to any or all Post Requests. One of the newer attacks against web applications is that the cross-site request forgery attack. It’s an attack against modern applications that store a cookie to represent the presently logged in user. The matter has been explained in different websites.

One of the techniques to stop this attack is to add an anti-forgery token using the @Html.AntiForgeryToken extension technique. On the controller side, the action technique defines the [ValidateAntiForgeryToken] attribute. Behind the scenes, the hidden input field for the anti-forgery token is valid by the ASP.NET MVC  5 framework to confirm it’s correct. Whereas there's discussion as to whether or not this approach is required only for the logging in an anonymous posts, or all posts in general, as been up for debate. However the purpose of CSRF is to attack authenticated users.
public class GlobalAntiForgeryTokenAttribute
  : FilterAttribute, IAuthorizationFilter
{
  public sub OnAuthorization(filterContext As AuthorizationContext)
  {
                if (filterContext.HttpContext.Request.HttpMethod.ToUpper() == "POST")
                {
                  AntiForgery.Validate();
    }         
  }
}

On authorization of the request, if the operation may be a POST request, we tend to call the Validate() method on the AntiForgery helper to actually perform the validation. All of our post operations are currently checked for forgery; but, this can fail as a result of we haven’t added our token globally. To do that, we've to create a custom form extension method just like the following:

public static void FormExtensions
{
   public static MvcForm BeginDataForm(this HtmlHelper html, string action, string controller, ...)
  {
     var form = html.BeginForm(action, controller, ...);
                 //At this point, the form markup is rendered in BeginForm
                 // we can render the token       
                 //With every form, we render a token, since this
                 //assumes all forms are posts
                 html.ViewContext.Writer.Write(html.AntiForgeryToken().ToHtmlString());
                return form;
   }
}

If we use our custom helper for all of our forms, then all of our custom forms can have rendered an anti-forgery token. so we don’t have to worry about making it ourselves, saving time and reducing code.



ASP.NET MVC 5 Hosting UK - HostForLIFE.eu :: RegularExpression Validation Using Annotations in ASP.NET MVC 5

clock October 21, 2014 11:34 by author Peter

We can do Regular Expression or REGEX validation using Annotations in ASP.NET MVC 5. we can use "RegularExpression" attribute for validation. during this attribute we specify Regular Expression string. We can also specify our custom error messages for that we'd like to set "ErrorMessage" Property in "RegularExpression" attribute. Here is the example for this.

We take "Email" Address validation using REGEX. If user enter email address, which isn't in correct format at that time our validation message display on screen.
[RegularExpression(@"[A-Za-z0-9._%+-]+@[A-Za-z0-9.-]+\.[A-Za-z]{2,4}",
        ErrorMessage="Email Address is not in proper format.")]
        public string Email { get; set; }

At the view side , add this code:
  @Html.EditorFor(model => model.Email)
        @Html.ValidationMessageFor(model => model.Email,"", new {  style="color:red"})

Here is Code for this. Model (Customer.cs):

public class Customer
    {
        public int CustomerID { get; set; }
        [Required]
        [StringLength(20,MinimumLength=2)]
        public string FirstName { get; set; }
        [StringLength(10)]
        public string LastName { get; set; }
        [RegularExpression(@"[A-Za-z0-9._%+-]+@[A-Za-z0-9.-]+\.[A-Za-z]{2,4}",
        ErrorMessage="Email Address is not in proper format.")]
       public string Email { get; set; }
    }



European ASP.NET MVC 5 Hosting - UK :: Using Bootstrap 3 in ASP.NET MVC 5

clock October 21, 2014 10:00 by author Scott

In this article, we will describe about ASP.NET MVC 5 uses Bootstrap 3 as the CSS framework. You can check our last article about asp.net mvc 5 scaffolding.

Get Started with ASP.NET MVC 5

When you create a new ASP.NET MVC 5 Web Application in Visual Studio 2013 it is using Bootstrap 3 as its default CSS Framework. You get the pleasure of the responsive navigation and website along with all the typography and other bells and whistles you expect from Bootstrap 3.

Inside the ASP.NET MVC 5 Website Template you will find the bootstrap.css and bootstrap.min.css stylesheets as well as the bootstrap.js and bootstrap.min.js scripts. The _Layout.cshtml view and other views are marked up appropriately using the CSS selectors in Bootstrap 3.

ASP.NET MVC 5 Bootstrap

By default, the ASP.NET MVC Website Template uses a couple of bundles that use both Bootstrap 3 CSS as well as Modernizr. Check out the Layout.cshtml view to see the use of two of the bundles.

  @Styles.Render("~/Content/css")
 
@Scripts.Render("~/bundles/modernizr")

You will find these bundles configured in the BundleConfig.cs file in App_Start.

  bundles.Add(new ScriptBundle("~/bundles/modernizr").Include(
    
"~/Scripts/modernizr-*"
));

  bundles
.Add(new StyleBundle("~/Content/css").Include(
    
"~/Content/bootstrap.css"
,
    
"~/Content/site.css"
));

And, of course, the CSS selectors and markup in the new ASP.NET MVC 5 Views are based on Bootstrap 3.

That’s only brief tutorial about ASP.NET MVC 5. We will be back with new tutorial again.

 

 



European HostForLIFE.eu Proudly Launches PrestaShop 1.6 Hosting

clock October 16, 2014 09:20 by author Peter

HostForLIFE.eu, a leading Windows web hosting provider with innovative technology solutions and a dedicated professional services team, today announced the support for PrestaShop 1.6 Hosting plan due to high demand of PrestaShop 1.6 users in Europe. HostForLIFE.eu hosts its servers in top class data centers that is located in Amsterdam, London and Seattle (US) to guarantee 99.9% network uptime. All data center feature redundancies in network connectivity, power, HVAC, security, and fire suppression. All hosting plans from HostForLIFE.eu include 24×7 support and 30 days money back guarantee.

PrestaShop 1.6 is a free and open-source e-commerce web application, committed to providing the best shopping cart experience for both merchants and customers. It is written in PHP, is highly customizable, supports all the major payment services, is translated in many languages and localized for many countries, is fully responsive (both front- and back-office), etc. PrestaShop 1.6 offers new and improved navigation elements making navigating your online shop easier and more effective than ever.

PrestaShop 1.6 presents a comprehensive, intuitive user administration panel, and gives you hundreds of standard functions that can be adapted or personalized in order to respond to all of customer needs. The front office template on PrestaShop 1.6 is now mobile responsive, allowing customer online shop to display perfectly when accessed from a mobile and tablet device.

At the forefront of the latest innovative web technology, PrestaShop 1.6 integrates with Bootstrap 3.0, FontAwesome, Sass Compass and D3 Data Driven Documents. Online Shopping has never been so technologically brilliant. A unique e-commerce feature you will only find in PrestaShop 1.6, Net Profit Margin is automatically updated in real-time.

Further information and the full range of features PrestaShop 1.6 Hosting can be viewed here http://hostforlife.eu/European-PrestaShop-16-Hosting

About HostForLIFE.eu
HostForLIFE.eu is an European Windows Hosting Provider which focuses on the Windows Platform only. HostForLIFE.eu deliver on-demand hosting solutions including Shared hosting, Reseller Hosting, Cloud Hosting, Dedicated Servers, and IT as a Service for companies of all sizes.

HostForLIFE.eu is awarded Top No#1 SPOTLIGHT Recommended Hosting Partner by Microsoft (see http://www.microsoft.com/web/hosting/HostingProvider/Details/953). Their service is ranked the highest top #1 spot in several European countries, such as: Germany, Italy, Netherlands, France, Belgium, United Kingdom, Sweden, Finland, Switzerland and other European countries. Besides this award, they have also won several awards from reputable organizations in the hosting industry and the detail can be found on their official website.



European ASP.NET MVC 5 Hosting - UK :: ASP.NET MVC 5 Scaffolding

clock October 13, 2014 07:28 by author Scott

In this article, I will show you how to use Scaffolding With your ASP.net MVC 5 Application. I assume that you all know about scaffolding and I don’t need to explain it again. In our previous post, we have also explained about Scaffolding with the Repository Pattern in ASP.NET MVC 3.

In this article, we will be more focus in adding scaffolded item to ASP.net MVC 5.

1. Let's create an ASP.net MVC 5 web application in Visual Studio 2013 and name it as ScaffoldingMVC5.

2. Right click your Controllers folder and Add New Scaffolded Item is as below.

3. From the Add Scaffold window, select the MVC 5 Controller with views,using Entity Framework scaffold template.

4. Add a controller. Please see the below screenshot

Then, please fill a name for your Data context as below, for example DataContext

5. You have done great job and this is the result

Testing the Result

Index Page

Create Page

Details Page

Edit Page

Delete Page

All above CRUD operations were generated according to our Model class Pet.

Pet.cs

Key points of the above code

  • [ScaffoldColumn(false)] means,the property which it declared will not use for scaffolding.In other words, that property will not be shown on the UI (i.e. Created property will not be shown).
  • Data validations of the form elements are happening ,according to the above model's Data Annotation values.
  • Let's explore it.

If you click the Create button, without entering anything.What will happen ?

What if you try to enter a wrong data type ?

 


Calender has been shown, if it's a DateTime property.

Great, right?



ASP.NET MVC 6 Hosting - HostForLIFE.eu :: Updating Multiple Row Using ASP.NET MVC and Entity Framework

clock October 7, 2014 12:11 by author Peter

In this post we are going to update multiple row using ASP.NET MVC and Entity Framework.  Just follow these steps below:
1. First we need to create a project.
Go to Menu File > New > Project > Select ASP.NET MVC web application > Entry Application Name > Click OK.


2. Add a Database.
Go to Solution Explorer > Right Click on App_Data folder > Add > New item > Select SQL Server Database Under Data > Enter Database name > Add. 
Open Database and add a table for update operation. Here I am creating a table called Contacts.

3. Add Entity Data Model.
Go to Solution Explorer > Right Click on Project Name from Solution Explorer folder > Add > New item > Select ADO.net Entity Data Model under data > Enter model name > Add.
A popup window will come (Entity Data Model Wizard) > Select Generate from database > Next > Chose your data connection > select your database > next > Select tables > enter Model Namespace > Finish.

After Creating Data model, we have to modify our generated entity(table) for Apply validation for required fields.

Here we need to modify contact.cs fileOpen file and modify as for enable validation.
namespace UpdateMultiRecord
{
    using System;
    using System.Collections.Generic;
    using System.ComponentModel.DataAnnotations;
    public partial class Contac
  {
        [Required]        
        public int ContactID { get; set; }
        [Required]
        public string ContactPerson { get; set; }       
 [Required]
        public string Contactno { get; set; }
        public string EmailID { get; set; }
    }
}


Here I am using Home controller index action.

Get Action      
[HttpGet]
        public ActionResult Index()
        {
            List<Contact> model = new List<Contact>();
            using (MyDatabaseEntities dc = new MyDatabaseEntities())
            {
                model = dc.Contacts.ToList();
            }
            return View(model);

        }     
Post Action       
 [HttpPost]
        public ActionResult Index(List<Contact> list)
        {
           if (ModelState.IsValid)
           {
               using (MyDatabaseEntities dc = new MyDatabaseEntities())
                {
                    foreach (var i in list)
                    {

                        var c = dc.Contacts.Where(a =>                                  
                        a.ContactID.Equals(i.ContactID)).FirstOrDefault();
                        if (c != null)
                        {
                            c.ContactPerson = i.ContactPerson;
                            c.Contactno = i.Contactno;
                            c.EmailID = i.EmailID;
                        }
                    }
                    dc.SaveChanges();
                }
                ViewBag.Message = "Successfully Updated.";
                return View(list);
            }
            else
            {
               ViewBag.Message = "Failed ! Please try again.";
                return View(list);
            }
        }       
Create View for Update Multiple Row.
@model List<UpdateMultiRecord.Contact>
@{
    ViewBag.Title = "Update multiple row at once Using MVC 4 and EF ";
}
@using (@Html.BeginForm("Index","Home", FormMethod.Post))
{
    <table>
            <tr>
                <th></th>               
                <th>Contact Person</th>
                <th>Contact No</th>
                <th>Email ID</th>
            </tr>
        @for (int i = 0; i < Model.Count; i++)
        {
            <tr>               
                <td> @Html.HiddenFor(model => model[i].ContactID)</td>
                <td>@Html.EditorFor(model => model[i].ContactPerson)</td>
                <td>@Html.EditorFor(model => model[i].Contactno)</td>
                <td>@Html.EditorFor(model => model[i].EmailID)</td>
            </tr>
        }
    </table>
    <p><input type="submit" value="Save" /></p>
    <p style="color:green; font-size:12px;">
        @ViewBag.Message
    </p>
}
 @section Scripts
     {@Scripts.Render("~/bundles/jqueryval")}

Code: @Scripts.Render("~/bundles/jqueryval") will enable client side validation. Finally, Run Application. Edit Contact Details and Click Save button.



HostForLIFE.eu Proudly Launches Hosting with SiteLock Malware Detector

clock October 6, 2014 06:29 by author Peter

HostForLIFE.eu, a leading Windows web hosting provider with innovative technology solutions and a dedicated professional services team, today announced the support of SiteLock Malware Detector on all their newest hosting environments. HostForLIFE.eu Hosting with SiteLock Malware Detector plan starts from just as low as $36.00 / year only and this plan has supported daily malware scan, trust seal, application scan, TrueSpeed CDN, etc.

HostForLIFE.eu offers the greatest performance and flexibility hosting with SiteLock Malware Detector at an economical price. HostForLIFE.eu provides flexible hosting solutions that enable their company to give maximum uptime to customer. SiteLock monitors your website 24x7 for vulnerabilities and attacks, which means you can worry less about your website and more about your business.

SiteLock is a cloud-based, website security solution for small businesses. It works as an early detection alarm for common online threats like malware injections, bot attacks etc. It not only protects websites from potential online threats, but also fixes vulnerabilities. With the presence of SiteLock, your website will be protected and scanned against viruses, spyware, malware, identity theft and other online scams. Note that, as they rely more and more on internet technology, these online viruses and scams become bigger and smarter to handle.

Over 70% Customers look for a sign of security before providing personal details online. The SiteLock Trust Seal not only re-assures customers, but also boosts sales. The customer doesn’t need technical ability to install and set up SiteLock for their website. SiteLock is cloud-based and starts scanning website and email instantly.
With this SiteLock feature, you can be assured that you will always be one step ahead of online hackers and swindlers’ illegal intentions. With more than 6 years in the web hosting business, HostForLIFE’s technical staff is more than ready on its feet to develop and tackle viruses, malware and the likes to sustain the safe and reliable use of your website.

Further information and the full range of features hosting with SiteLock Malware Detector can be viewed here http://www.hostforlife.eu/Hosting-with-Sitelock-Malware-Detector-in-Europe



About HostForLIFE.eu

HostForLIFE.eu is European Windows Hosting Provider which focuses on Windows Platform only. We deliver on-demand hosting solutions including Shared hosting, Reseller Hosting, Cloud Hosting, Dedicated Servers, and IT as a Service for companies of all sizes.

We have offered the latest Windows 2016 Hosting, ASP.NET Core 2.2.1 Hosting, ASP.NET MVC 6 Hosting and SQL 2017 Hosting.


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