I had a look at the MVC source to see if I could figure out how to do this. There seems to be very close coupling between controller context, views, view data, routing data and the html render methods.
Basically in order to make this happen you need to create all of these extra elements. Some of them are relatively simple (such as the view data) but some are a bit more complex - for instance the routing data will consider the current WebForms page to be ignored.
The big problem appears to be the HttpContext - MVC pages rely on a HttpContextBase (rather than HttpContext like WebForms do) and while both implement IServiceProvider they're not related. The designers of MVC made a deliberate decision not to change the legacy WebForms to use the new context base, however they did provide a wrapper.
This works and lets you add a partial view to a WebForm:
public class WebFormController : Controller { }
public static class WebFormMVCUtil
{
public static void RenderPartial( string partialName, object model )
{
//get a wrapper for the legacy WebForm context
var httpCtx = new HttpContextWrapper( System.Web.HttpContext.Current );
//create a mock route that points to the empty controller
var rt = new RouteData();
rt.Values.Add( "controller", "WebFormController" );
//create a controller context for the route and http context
var ctx = new ControllerContext(
new RequestContext( httpCtx, rt ), new WebFormController() );
//find the partial view using the viewengine
var view = ViewEngines.Engines.FindPartialView( ctx, partialName ).View;
//create a view context and assign the model
var vctx = new ViewContext( ctx, view,
new ViewDataDictionary { Model = model },
new TempDataDictionary() );
//render the partial view
view.Render( vctx, System.Web.HttpContext.Current.Response.Output );
}
}
Then in your WebForm you can do this:
<% WebFormMVCUtil.RenderPartial( "ViewName", this.GetModel() ); %>
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