Tutorials ASP.NET Core MVC Tutorial
Cascading Dropdown List — Complete Guide
Cascading Dropdown List — Complete Guide: free step-by-step lesson with examples, common mistakes, and interview tips — part of ASP.NET Core MVC Tutorial on Toolliyo Academy.
On this page
ASP.NET Core MVC Tutorial · Lesson 162 of 200
Cascading Dropdown List
Getting Started ✓ → Core MVC ✓ → Data & Security ✓ → Production ✓ → Career ✓
Interview Ready · 10 — Interview Prep · ~10 min · Section 18: Advanced MVC
What is this?
Cascading Dropdown List is an important part of building ShopNest and real MVC applications. This lesson shows one clear example you can run locally.
Why should you care?
Teams use Cascading Dropdown List when shipping admin panels, portals, and stores on ASP.NET Core MVC.
See it live — copy this example
Create an MVC project (dotnet new mvc), add the code, and run dotnet run.
@model ProductViewModel
@Html.LabelFor(m => m.Name)
@Html.TextBoxFor(m => m.Name, new { @class = "form-control" })
@Html.ValidationMessageFor(m => m.Name)
Run Example »
Edit the code and click Run — like W3Schools Try it Yourself.
What happened?
- Walk through the example top to bottom.
- Each line connects to Cascading Dropdown List.
- Change one piece, run dotnet run, and observe the result.
Try it yourself
- Open the example for Cascading Dropdown List.
- Type or paste it into ShopNest.Mvc in the right folder.
- Run the app and verify behavior in the browser.
- Change text or labels in the example and run again — watch the browser update.
- Break the code on purpose (remove a semicolon), read the error message, then fix it.
Remember
Cascading Dropdown List — know what it does and when to use it. Practice on ShopNest before moving on. Use the Next lesson link when this feels comfortable.