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ASP.NET HTMX

Adding Paging with HTMX and ASP.NET Core with TagHelper

Friday, 09 August 2024

Introduction

Now that I have a bunch of blog posts the home page was getting rather length so I decided to add a paging mechanism for blog posts.

This goes along with adding full caching for blog posts to make this a quick and efficient site.

See the Blog Service source for how this is implemented; it's really pretty simple using the IMemoryCache.

TagHelper

I decided to use a TagHelper to implement the paging mechanism. This is a great way to encapsulate the paging logic and make it reusable. This uses the pagination taghelper from Darrel O'Neill this is included in the project as a nuget package.

This is then added to the _ViewImports.cshtml file so it is available to all views.

@addTagHelper *,PaginationTagHelper.AspNetCore

The TagHelper

In the _BlogSummaryList.cshtml partial view I added the following code to render the paging mechanism.

<pager link-url="@Model.LinkUrl"
       hx-boost="true"
       hx-push-url="true"
       hx-target="#content"
       hx-swap="show:none"
       page="@Model.Page"
       page-size="@Model.PageSize"
       total-items="@Model.TotalItems" ></pager>

A few notable things here:

  1. link-url this allows the taghelper to generate the correct url for the paging links. In the HomeController Index method this is set to that action.
   var posts = blogService.GetPostsForFiles(page, pageSize);
   posts.LinkUrl= Url.Action("Index", "Home");
   if (Request.IsHtmx())
   {
      return PartialView("_BlogSummaryList", posts);
   }

And in the Blog controller

    public IActionResult Index(int page = 1, int pageSize = 5)
    {
        var posts = blogService.GetPostsForFiles(page, pageSize);
        if(Request.IsHtmx())
        {
            return PartialView("_BlogSummaryList", posts);
        }
        posts.LinkUrl = Url.Action("Index", "Blog");
        return View("Index", posts);
    }

This is set to that URl. This ensures the pagination helper can work for either top level method.

HTMX Properties

hx-boost, hx-push-url, hx-target, hx-swap these are all HTMX properties that allow the paging to work with HTMX.

     hx-boost="true"
       hx-push-url="true"
       hx-target="#content"
       hx-swap="show:none"

Here we use hx-boost="true" this allows the pagination taghelper to not need any modifications by intercepting it's normal URL generation and using the current URL.

hx-push-url="true" to ensure the URL is swapped in the browser's URL history (which allows direct linking to pages).

hx-target="#content" this is the target div that will be replaced with the new content.

hx-swap="show:none" this is the swap effect that will be used when the content is replaced. In this case it prevents the normal 'jump' effect which HTMX uses on swapping content.

CSS

I also added styles to the main.css in my /src directory allowing me to use the Tailwind CSS classes for the pagination links.

.pagination {
    @apply py-2 flex list-none p-0 m-0 justify-center items-center;
}

.page-item {
    @apply mx-1 text-black  dark:text-white rounded;
}

.page-item a {
    @apply block rounded-md transition duration-300 ease-in-out;
}

.page-item a:hover {
    @apply bg-blue-dark text-white;
}

.page-item.disabled a {
    @apply text-blue-dark pointer-events-none cursor-not-allowed;
}

Controller

page, page-size, total-items are the properties that the pagination taghelper uses to generate the paging links. These are passed into the partial view from the controller.

 public IActionResult Index(int page = 1, int pageSize = 5)

Blog Service

Here page and pageSize are passed in from the URL and the total items are calculated from the blog service.

    public PostListViewModel GetPostsForFiles(int page=1, int pageSize=10)
    {
        var model = new PostListViewModel();
        var posts = GetPageCache().Values.Select(GetListModel).ToList();
        model.Posts = posts.OrderByDescending(x => x.PublishedDate).Skip((page - 1) * pageSize).Take(pageSize).ToList();
        model.TotalItems = posts.Count();
        model.PageSize = pageSize;
        model.Page = page;
        return model;
    }

Here we simply get the posts from the cache, order them by date and then skip and take the correct number of posts for the page.

Conclusion

This was a simple addition to the site but it makes it much more usable. The HTMX integration makes the site feel more responsive while not adding more JavaScript to the site.

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©2024 Scott Galloway