I'm working on a windows 8 metro-style app, using developer preview for an academic project at university. We have to use MVVM pattern.
In the main Page we have a metro-style main menu with buttons. Each button leads to an application facility (ie. 'Show my Library', 'Show Favourites', ...) which should belong to a different View, according to MVVM pattern.
In your opinion should we create a new 'metro-style Page' for each View or expect a 'Scenario' for each use case refreshing the main Page, like those present in many example apps?
In other terms, using MVVM should there be a 1:1 match between 'plain old WPF Windows' and 'brand new metro-style Pages'?
The thing with MVVM is that there are no hard rules as to what constitutes a View other than the fact that it is the means by which the user can view the ViewModel data.
A View need not be a Page, but can be a Control. Thus you can have one page, on which many View controls are displayed, if you wish. Quite often I have my Views as controls, even if they are to be the sole item displayed on a page, as it allows me to embed them in other pages more easily at a later date.
The MVVM pattern is purely a means of separating the UI from the business/code logic. A ViewModel class doesn't care how it's data is displayed, it just provides the binding points, properties etc., for the data to be displayed and trigger points for code function.
Some people will insist that there is never any code in the code behind files, but I think that a more pragmatic approach is required. Code that controls visual aspects of the View is fine, and there are occaisions when what appears to be business logic intrudes.
For example when implementing drag and drop functionality code will be required in the code behind. This is really just a visual aspect so no problem there, but if the business model dictates that only certain items, or a maximum number of items are dropped in a given location then the ViewModel will need to provide some data binding points that the View can use to implement this. By doing so you could argue that the View code behind now implements some business logic.
So back to your original question. I would try to implement the application such that it behaves as is expected for a windows 8 metro-stryle application. This will obviously have a bearing on how you code, but it should still be possible to stick to the MVVM pattern when doing so.
Related
I have to convert a decent sized Winforms application into a WPF app following the MVVM pattern. I'm not sure what the best way to do this is.
The application is built around a third party map control.
Multiple windows: A main window that displays the map, and other windows that allow the user to change properties of the map (add layers, change styles, etc).
My plan was to create a viewmodel for each window, and have a base viewmodel containing the map control itself and any properties/methods that needed to be shared.
The main thing I'm not sure about is how to handle the map operations that are built into the control. For instance, there is a MapMouse_Down event. Normally I would just put this in the code behind if I wasn't following MVVM, and handle it there. Is that the correct way to handle this?
Normally I would just put this in the code behind if I wasn't following MVVM, and handle it there. Is that the correct way to handle this?
You could keep anything that is purely view related in the code-behind of the views but anything that is testable application logic should be implemented in view models. View-related stuff may for example be animations and any code that changes the behaviour or appearance of a control in some way, like for example setting some width or colour.
There are different ways to handle "events" in MVVM depending on what kind of controls you are using but you would generally defined commands in the view model and invoked these from the view. Please refer to this blog post for more information.
Having a separate view model for each different type of window is ideal.
View models should never contain controls. They should contain only abstractions of the controls. If all of your windows have mapping components, only then should your base window view model have an abstraction of the mapping control. (An example of the sort of abstraction I'm talking about: Imagine a view that where the user should enter a name. The view will have a TextBox which has a Text property. The view model will have a Name property. The view will bind the TextBox's Text property to the view model's Name property. Figuring out the right abstractions for larger applications is one of the challenges of MVVM.)
It's perfectly fine to have event handlers in your view if your controls don't support data binding or they don't have ICommand support. But the event handler in your view should do as little as possible, instead just transferring control over to your view model, which will update its abstract representation of the view, which the view will then re-synchronize to through data bindings or manual synchronization logic.
WPF is different for Winforms, the approach is based on the binding of proprety .
Below an Example of using MVVM.
Easy MVVM Example
I'm currently developing an application in C# that will have two layouts: simple and advanced.
The simple layout would have 4 objects (2 buttons and 2 text controls) and the advanced layout would have 8 objects.
What would be the best way to do this? Having two forms? Or set the button.visible to true/false (and for each object?).
If you follow a UI pattern that allows for separation of model, view and controller (e.g. MVVM or MVC), you will find it is very straightforward to have two separate forms that can be evolved over time as needed, with only minimal changes to the rest of your code.
Trying to make a single form work for two different presentations tends to get complex over time (compared to the alternative of just making two forms that share the same model and controller) as user requirements evolve.
UPDATE
Based on your comment... you can also do MVC with WinForms
http://www.codeproject.com/Articles/383153/The-Model-View-Controller-MVC-Pattern-with-Csharp
I would propose a third option, having two user controls that share the same form. Then all you have to do is set the appropriate user control visible. And you get the benefit of being able to share any code between the two.
I'm using Caliburn Micro for my project, and I decided to use Fluent Ribbon as part of the UI. My ShellView is really simple, and it's laid out like this:
Ribbon Control with 4 tabs.
ActiveItem.
The Active item is dynamically changed depending on the Ribbon's selected tab.
Question:
What is the proper way to use Ribbon control as a second view for my currently active ViewModel (ActiveItem), while maintaining modularity and all the goodies which come inherit with CM itself? Also, what would it take to "share" my Ribbon control among my ViewModels?
Details:
My ShellViewModel is of type "Conductor.Collection.OneActive", and it changes the ActiveItem to specific ViewModel I associate with selected tab (when event is fired).
My Ribbon is defined in XAML like this:
<ContentControl x:Name="RibbonBar" Micro:View.Model="{Binding ActiveItem}" Micro:View.Context="Ribbon" />
As it shows, Ribbon control is bound to currently active item as it's context view. That actually works for one view, because due to default CMs conventions, where it looks for the contextual views in the sub namespace (e.g. if my path to the view is Views.TasksTabView, it will look for the Context view at Views.TasksTab.Ribbon).
Problem is, when I change the ActiveItem, context view can't be located anymore, due to the different namespace, so It only works for one Tab.
I've also tried writing my own ViewLocator convention but I had no success with it.
Thank you.
Unfortunatelly since there are no answers, I'll answer it myself.
I did manage to write the additional ViewLocator logic to locate my Ribbon, but that created some problems (It seems that binding in CM only works once, so after Ribbon being located and bound to the VM, additional context view changes do nothing. There were some hard to find bugs as well).
I've taken a different approach then. I've separated Ribbon to it's own ViewModel, and composited it to the shell with rest of the modules. It uses EventAggregator and I also Inject it where neccessary. Not approach I was hoping for, but it works for now.
If anyone posts better answer, I'll definitelly accept that one.
I've done several WPF application(not using MVVM) in the past and I had always to implement my own system of navigation between view(instantiate the view once, and then load in a container component, with refreshing required components of my view).
It works, but:
It's always custom, so if a new developer comes he has to learn of it how it works
I'm pretty sure that It's not the most optimized(most of things haven't been done in background worker, ...)
It's a time loss
So I was wondering if there is an official way to handle this ? I don't exactly how, but I was thinking to a navigation component, which can act a little like a tab panel, or a little like the MVC framework in asp.net, we can call a specified controller for an action and some parameters.
Maybe deactiviting bindings when they aren't in the current view
You can use DataTemplates/Styles to customize content of your control ( not only apearance, but data, cause that what you're asking for I presume)
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms742521.aspx
You can have one Host control and at runtime change its appearance based on events/ states.
Like an example can have a look here:
http://code.google.com/p/svnradar/ how this program manages a appearance of Group and Flat view of repository information.
Another example:
Podder of Josh Smith
http://joshsmithonwpf.wordpress.com/2008/03/05/podder-v2-has-been-released/
Hope this helps.
You may be interested by Lakana, a lightweight (but powerful) framework that can handle for you all the navigation concerns !
Riana
I'm trying to create a strategy for handling popup forms for use throughout any part of my application. My understanding so far is that I will need a single UserControl in the root of my MainWindow. This will be bound to its own ViewModel which will handle the messages that are sent within the app.
I'm using MVVM Light, and I'm fairly new to the Messenger class.
Imagine a Master/Details scenario, where a list a objects are contained within a ListBox. Selecting one of these items and clicking an Edit button would display a UserControl which covers the whole screen. The user can then edit the selected item, and click OK to commit the change.
I want the UserControl that is opened to be "generic" in a way that I can throw any (probably a ViewModel) at it... for it to render the ViewModel via a DataTemplate and handle all the object changes. Clicking OK will callback to the sending class and persist the change as before.
Some situations where this would be useful are...
Display error messages with no required user input (other than OK to close it)
Display an edit form for a data item
Confirmation dialogs (much like a standard MessageBox)
Can anyone provide any code samples of how I might acheive this?
When designing a UI with MVVM the goal is to separate the concerns of the View from the concerns of the ViewModel. Ideally, the ViewModel should not rely on any view components. However, this is the idal and another rule of MVVM is that you should design your application as you wish.
In the area providing a service showing dialogs there are two different approaches floating arround:
Implementing the DialogService on the View (e.g. see http://geekswithblogs.net/lbugnion/archive/2011/04/13/deep-dive-mvvm-samples-mix11-deepdivemvvm.aspx Sample 03).
Implementing a service component that does is not attached to the view (e.g. see http://blog.roboblob.com/2010/01/19/modal-dialogs-with-mvvm-and-silverlight-4/)
Both approaches rely on an interface that defines the functionality the service provides. The implementation for this Service is then injected into the ViewModel.
Also, do both approaches have their specific advantages and disadvantages.
The first approach works also well for WP7, however, it requires a common view base class as this contains the implementation of the view service.
The second approach works well for SilverLight and WPF and appleals as it keeps the service separate from the view and does not impose any restictions on the view.
Another possible solution is to use messaging to show the dialogs.
Whatever approach you are using try to keep the View and the ViewModel de-coupled by using an IoC (inversion of control) pattern, i.e. define an interface so that you can use different implementations. To bind the services into the ViewModel use injection, i.e. passing the service into the constructor of the ViewModel or by setting a property.
I recently started learning MVVM for a WPF app I was creating, I used this article as a basis for showing dialogs, if you download the sample project then it is actually quite a nice decoupled method, it is nicely abstracted and to get a view you pass an instance of a viewmodel. I extended it somewhat for my own means, I also used the WPFExtendedToolkit MessageBox for warnings, errors etc because the standard win32 MessageBox is fugly.
With regards to dynamic forms then you'll want to investigate the ItemsControl, and in your ViewModels have a Collection of Data Items which need to be edited by the user for the ItemsControl to bind to. I have a dialog for editing actions and their parameters in a workflow system designer where the dialog list of actions was totally dynamic. This was done by exposing a collection of my items with their data types so I could then use a DataTemplateSelector to select DataTemplates which contained the correct types of controls, i.e. a datatype of DateTime showed a DatePicker.
Hope That Helps
From the perspective of a developer coming in to 'maintain' that generic code, it sounds like a pain. From what you've described, I would give the form and the dialog the same view model and create a specific XAML template for the dialog that you want to show.