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In the previous part in this series, I set up the database for the comments system. In this post, I'll cover how saving the comments are managed client side and in ASP.NET Core.
_CommentForm.cshtml
This is a Razor partial view that contains the form for adding a new comment. You can see on first load it calls to window.mostlylucid.comments.setup()
which initializes the editor. This is a simple textarea that uses the SimpleMDE
editor to allow for rich text editing.
@model Mostlylucid.Models.Comments.CommentInputModel
<div x-data="{ initializeEditor() { window.mostlylucid.comments.setup() } }"
x-init="initializeEditor()" class="max-w-none dark:prose-dark" id="commentform">
<section id="commentsection" ></section>
<input type="hidden" asp-for="BlogPostId" />
<div asp-validation-summary="All" class="text-red-500" id="validationsummary"></div>
<p class="font-body text-lg font-medium text-primary dark:text-white pb-8">Welcome @Model.Name please comment below.</p>
<div asp-validation-summary="All" class="text-red-500" id="validationsummary"></div>
<!-- Username Input -->
<div class="flex space-x-4"> <!-- Flexbox to keep Name and Email on the same line -->
<!-- Username Input -->
<label class="input input-bordered flex items-center gap-2 mb-2 dark:bg-custom-dark-bg bg-white w-1/2">
<i class='bx bx-user'></i>
<input type="text" class="grow text-black dark:text-white bg-transparent border-0"
asp-for="Name" placeholder="Name (required)" />
</label>
<!-- Email Input -->
<label class="input input-bordered flex items-center gap-2 mb-2 dark:bg-custom-dark-bg bg-white w-1/2">
<i class='bx bx-envelope'></i>
<input type="email" class="grow text-black dark:text-white bg-transparent border-0"
asp-for="Email" placeholder="Email (optional)" />
</label>
</div>
<textarea id="commenteditor" class="hidden w-full h-44 dark:bg-custom-dark-bg bg-white text-black dark:text-white rounded-2xl"></textarea>
<input type="hidden" asp-for="ParentId"></input>
<button class="btn btn-outline btn-sm mb-4" hx-action="Comment" hx-controller="Comment" hx-post hx-vals x-on:click.prevent="window.mostlylucid.comments.setValues($event)" hx-swap="outerHTML" hx-target="#commentform">Comment</button>
</div>
Here we use the Alpine.js x-init
call to initialize the editor. This is a simple textarea that uses the SimpleMDE
editor to allow for rich text editing (because why not :)) .
<div x-data="{ initializeEditor() { window.mostlylucid.comments.setup() } }"
x-init="initializeEditor()" class="max-w-none dark:prose-dark" id="commentform">
window.mostlylucid.comments.setup()
This lives in the comment.js
and is responsible for initializing the simpleMDE editor.
function setup () {
if (mostlylucid.simplemde && typeof mostlylucid.simplemde.initialize === 'function') {
mostlylucid.simplemde.initialize('commenteditor', true);
} else {
console.error("simplemde is not initialized correctly.");
}
};
This is a simple function that checks if the simplemde
object is initialized and if so calls the initialize
function on it.
To save the comment we use HTMX to do a POST to the CommentController
which then saves the comment to the database.
<button class="btn btn-outline btn-sm mb-4" hx-action="Comment" hx-controller="Comment" hx-post hx-vals x-on:click.prevent="window.mostlylucid.comments.setValues($event)" hx-swap="outerHTML" hx-target="#commentform">Comment</button>
This uses the HTMX tag helper to post back to the CommentController
and then swaps the form with the new comment.
Then we hook into the mostlylucid.comments.setValues($event)
which we use to populate the hx-values
atribute (this is only necessary as simplemde needs to be updated manually).
function setValues (evt) {
const button = evt.currentTarget;
const element = mostlylucid.simplemde.getinstance('commenteditor');
const content = element.value();
const email = document.getElementById("Email");
const name = document.getElementById("Name");
const blogPostId = document.getElementById("BlogPostId");
const parentId = document.getElementById("ParentId")
const values = {
content: content,
email: email.value,
name: name.value,
blogPostId: blogPostId.value,
parentId: parentId.value
};
button.setAttribute('hx-vals', JSON.stringify(values));
};
}
The comment controller's save-comment
action is responsible for saving the comment to the database. It also sends an email to the blog owner (me) when a comment is added.
[HttpPost]
[Route("save-comment")]
public async Task<IActionResult> Comment([Bind(Prefix = "")] CommentInputModel model )
{
if (!ModelState.IsValid)
{
return PartialView("_CommentForm", model);
}
var postId = model.BlogPostId;
;
var name = model.Name ?? "Anonymous";
var email = model.Email ?? "Anonymous";
var comment = model.Content;
var parentCommentId = model.ParentId;
var htmlContent= await commentService.Add(postId, parentCommentId, name, comment);
if (string.IsNullOrEmpty(htmlContent))
{
ModelState.AddModelError("Content", "Comment could not be saved");
return PartialView("_CommentForm", model);
}
var slug = await blogService.GetSlug(postId);
var url = Url.Action("Show", "Blog", new {slug }, Request.Scheme);
var commentModel = new CommentEmailModel
{
SenderEmail = email ?? "",
Comment = htmlContent,
PostUrl = url??string.Empty,
};
await sender.SendEmailAsync(commentModel);
model.Content = htmlContent;
return PartialView("_CommentResponse", model);
}
You'll see that this does a few things:
This post URL then lets me click the post, if I'm logged in as me (using my Google Auth thing). This just checks for my Google ID then sets the 'IsAdmin' property which lets me see the comments and delete them if necessary.
So that's part 2, how I save the comments. There's still a couple of pieces missing; threading (so you can reply to a comment), listing your own comments and deleting comments. I'll cover those in the next post.