So basically we're doing an ajax post with some data that's built up correctly in the test page that we've got set up but when it hits our Post method in our controller all of the values are default values
So: we have some custom log4net log-writing code that ships the log messages off to a database, since we want to keep the logs long-term and we can't rely on the local filesystem of Azure roles to be persistent, plus it's cooler to query and analyze and data-mine with SQL.
{"EnumValue1":"ValidValue","EnumValue2":"ValidValue","DoubleValue1":"90","DoubleValue1":"1.5"} - that's the actual string value of the json I grabbed from Chrome debugger (with a little find/replace)
Whoever provided that "Routing in ASP.NET Web API" link that looks like it's going to be helpful. I'll let you ladies and gents get on with your lives and see what I can glean from that.
it doesn't make sense, because the model binding normally just goes off of what properties you have in your json, they match, so they should populate your model, the only other thing i can think of is y ou're accidently hitting the wrong endpoint, but if you were able to inspect the Thing class after binding, you're obviously not hitting the wrong action method / route, so i'm confuzzled
for possibly dumb historical reasons something in the core of asp.net considers urls to /look/like/this/all/the/time and there is conversion going on between that and query params
mathematically speaking, it's dumb not to. I could spend 10 hours farming, or 10 hours coding, an dmake 10x the usd coding, and buy the same amount of gold
@SteveG I think I've seen it enter an action method before, but with parameters as defaults. I think it might pick the best guess if it can't perform an exact match
You know what's weird is that I would expect the parameter being passed in to the post method to be null rather than just having all default properties