What are MVP and MVC and what is the difference?
Model-View-Presenter
In MVP,
the Presenter contains the UI business logic for the View. All
invocations from the View delegate directly to Presenter. The
Presenter is also decoupled directly from the View and talks to it
through an interface. This is to allow mocking of the View in a unit
test. One common attribute of MVP is that there has to be a lot of
two-way dispatching. For example, when someone clicks the "Save"
button, the event handler delegates to the Presenter's "OnSave"
method. Once the save is completed, the Presenter will then call back
the View through its interface so that the View can display that the
save has completed.
MVP
tends to be a very natural pattern for achieving separated
presentation in Web Forms. The reason is that the View is always
created first by the ASP.NET runtime. You can find
out more about both variants.
Two primary variations
Passive
View: The
View is as dumb as possible and contains almost zero logic. The
Presenter is a middle man that talks to the View and the Model. The
View and Model are completely shielded from one another. The Model
may raise events, but the Presenter subscribes to them for updating
the View. In Passive View there is no direct data binding, instead
the View exposes setter properties which the Presenter uses to set
the data. All state is managed in the Presenter and not the View.
- Pro: maximum testability surface; clean separation of the View and Model
- Con: more work (for example all the setter properties) as you are doing all the data binding yourself.
Supervising
Controller: The
Presenter handles user gestures. The View binds to the Model directly
through data binding. In this case it's the Presenter's job to pass
off the Model to the View so that it can bind to it. The Presenter
will also contain logic for gestures like pressing a button,
navigation, etc.
- Pro: by leveraging databinding the amount of code is reduced.
- Con: there's less testable surface (because of data binding), and there's less encapsulation in the View since it talks directly to the Model.
Model-View-Controller
In
the MVC,
the Controller is responsible for determining which View is displayed
in response to any action including when the application loads. This
differs from MVP where actions route through the View to the
Presenter. In MVC, every action in the View correlates with a call to
a Controller along with an action. In the web each action involves a
call to a URL on the other side of which there is a Controller who
responds. Once that Controller has completed its processing, it will
return the correct View. The sequence continues in that manner
throughout the life of the application:
Action in the View -> Call to Controller -> Controller Logic -> Controller returns the View.
One
other big difference about MVC is that the View does not directly
bind to the Model. The view simply renders, and is completely
stateless. In implementations of MVC the View usually will not have
any logic in the code behind. This is contrary to MVP where it is
absolutely necessary as if the View does not delegate to the
Presenter, it will never get called.
Presentation Model
One
other pattern to look at is the Presentation
Model pattern.
In this pattern there is no Presenter. Instead the View binds
directly to a Presentation Model. The Presentation Model is a Model
crafted specifically for the View. This means this Model can expose
properties that one would never put on a domain model as it would be
a violation of separation-of-concerns. In this case, the Presentation
Model binds to the domain model, and may subscribe to events coming
from that Model. The View then subscribes to events coming from the
Presentation Model and updates itself accordingly. The Presentation
Model can expose commands which the view uses for invoking actions.
The advantage of this approach is that you can essentially remove the
code-behind altogether as the PM completely encapsulates all of the
behaviour for the view. This pattern is a very strong candidate for
use in WPF applications and is also called Model-View-ViewModel.
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