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21:00
@linguini Seriously, the only name I can think of for that approach isn't fit for a PG-rated movie.
fscked! the movie!
@TravisJ ok, I misread then though it would collapse to url, ty Travis!
@KendallFrey : Ok. Tomorrow will be WPF MVVM.
Also all how about trying and if you like it upvote Travis script it would be really nice to see this integrated in the chat
21:01
Blah.
@ChadRuppert : view is implemented from an Interface.
YES! I finally fixed this EF nightmare. It just took a nap.
I must have been learning MVVM/MVC wrong all along.
@JohanLarsson I've now referred to this as Traviscript.
21:03
me too
and here i thought it was about binding a model to a view. not talking to the view from the model.
silly us!
@KendallFrey : sorry it was my mistake, it's MVC in Winforms.
its not MVC. stop calling it that.
@Billdr Naps are awesome. I'm spearheading a campaign for them to be incorporated into our process.
2
What? That's what you said.
Also, what he said.
@KendallFrey Also, what she said.
21:04
@ChadRuppert : ok. I'll read the pattern once again.
@KendallFrey Here is where I run away screaming, knowing that its not going to get through @linguini's head
@ChadRuppert ho hum
@ChadRuppert :)
You guys all have a good evening/weekend.
linguini: you know you arent doing mvc when your model talks to the view in ANY way directly.
@ChadRuppert Adios, @Chad.
21:06
even via an interface
laters
@ChadRuppert "MVC: Doing It Wrong", by @linguini.
@ChadRuppert Incorrect, actually.
Model can in fact talk to the view in traditional MVC, heck, it's the whole purpose.
You just know the derivation (like many people).
Quick overview of MVC:
The Model is your data. It does nothing special but be a thing.
The View is your user interface. It gets data from the Model and displays it. It also talks to the Controller to manipulate the data.
The Controller is what performs operations on your data, such as modifying the values. The View uses it instead of talking to the Model directly.
What people enforce 'as MVC' is actually MVP.
Model–view–presenter (MVP) is a derivative of the model–view–controller (MVC) software pattern, also used mostly for building user interfaces. In MVP the presenter assumes the functionality of the "middle-man" (played by the controller in MVC). In MVP, all presentation logic is pushed to the presenter. Eventually, the model becomes strictly a domain model. Pattern description MVP is a user interface design pattern engineered to facilitate automated unit testing and improve the separation of concerns in presentation logic: * The model is an interface defining the data to be displa...
@KendallFrey I refer to the Model as APOCO: ALWAYS A PLAIN OLD CONTAINER OBJECT
21:07
MVC has different structured approaches depending on the entry point. Web is different than dedicated.
@KendallFrey Okay; this is what I was taught originally... looking back on it, I've let my concept of MVC patterns get corrupted by MVP.
MVC actually HAS INTERACTION between each component..
Model–view–controller (MVC) is a software architecture that separates the representation of information from the user's interaction with it. The model consists of application data and business rules, and the controller mediates input, converting it to commands for the model or view. A view can be any output representation of data, such as a chart or a diagram. Multiple views of the same data are possible, such as a pie chart for management and a tabular view for accountants. code reusability and separation of concerns. In addition to dividing the application into three kinds of component...
@KendallFrey : that is what i have been doing it. Model Class, controller & Interface implemented in the form.
@linguini That does not sound like MVC, sorry.
But hey, if you want to tightly couple, go for it...it is your funeral.
21:09
@KendallFrey could you refer me some tutorial please?
@linguini MVC isn't something that can really be tutorialized; it's a design pattern. EDIT: Or more specifically, an architectural pattern.
I don't know of any. All I learned about MVC comes by reading Wikipedia and listening to the pros talk about it.
trol mode on: It's actually an architectural pattern, not a design pattern per se
@RoelvanUden I edited my post before you even replied, lol
codeproject.com/Articles/383153/…, this is the exmaple i'm following.
21:12
@ShotgunNinja Aww. Missed that. You wasted my troll.
@RoelvanUden TIL that my knowledge of MVC is not the standard view, but the correct one.
@RoelvanUden your profile picture creeps me so much...
@Pheonixblade9 Why is that? :)
@KendallFrey I've found it very easy, in the spur of the moment, to disregard a conventional MVC architecture when it doesn't seem necessary, and to tightly-couple stuff... but it never works out in the long-run.
@RoelvanUden just creepy anime girl staring at me constantly
21:14
@Pheonixblade9 But.. but.. it's Erin. She's cute.
Something can be cute and creepy at the same time. Look at @KendallFrey. Wait, never mind, he's not cute, he's just a whipper snapper
2
model your data, control your interactions, view the results. The view should not know anything about the data model. The view should simply reflect what the result of the interactions are. Requests should be made by control. Request data or to change data from the data model. Request to display results from the view or to send data to the view to display.
@Pheonixblade9 I'm cute and creepy at the same time.
@ShotgunNinja yes. yes, you are
21:15
"The view should not know anything about the data model." I'm confused.
@KendallFrey That is MVP.
@KendallFrey hur durr durr? I'm confused as well.
@Kendall - Sometimes a view model is passed to the view for data to be displayed in a structure.
I thought.
Think of it this way. Tightly coupling code is like tightly coupling a car. Imagine if you had to take the entire transmission out of a car to change the engine oil. That is what happens when you couple code too tightly.
21:16
In MVP and MVVM, that sentence does make sense.
@Pheonixblade9 I have to remove my front-right tire, my air intake, and my right front headlight assembly to change my battery... Such a pain in the ass...
@roel - that is mvc.
@ShotgunNinja your car is French, isn't it?
It's just a confused state. MVC in the traditional sense, the view is aware of the model. The web frameworks in PHP .NET, Ruby, and so forth use MVP where they call P as C.
@TravisJ Confused again.
Doesn't the View bind directly to the Model?
21:18
@Pheonixblade9 It's an American Dodge Intrepid.
@KendallFrey in ASP.NET MVC, yeah
@ShotgunNinja sweet zombie jesus
@Kendall - the view binds to a view model, you shouldn't use your fully qualified entities as view models.
I'm glad American manufacturers are making decent cars again
21:18
See where the red line is going in by the headlight? The battery is under that.
that's just... horrible
@TravisJ That's MVVM
lmao, I love how they spell it "liter"
Liter? Dumb Americans.
we also spell it theater
21:19
@Pheonixblade9 I know, right? Litre, metre, colour, and PARKOOOOOOOOR
Also grey and theatre.
@KendallFrey - A structure of data is sent to the view from the controller. The view does not get this view model from the data model (MVVM).
@TravisJ Still confused. When does MVVM have a Controller?
@KendallFrey It has a ViewModel instead, in the most redundant and moronic naming scheme possible.
It doesn't have a controller
@KendallFrey MVC every component is aware. Controller handles input and talks to the model to apply changes, which informs the view and that updates. MVVM you are aware of, Model is accessed through VM which is not aware of a View, and View talks to VM and VM throws events around. MVP is what most conceive as MVC, Controller handles request, pulls data from model and throws it at a view.
@TravisJ Then why did you mention it?
@Kendall - Because you can still use a view model for mvc. That is how you structure the data which is sent to the view.
I thought data is pulled from the Model, not pushed to the View.
Greetings! Anybody feel like a challenge? I'm having an issue with the .NET DataGridView causing a form to hang when the vertical scrollbar appears.
0
Q: C# DataGridView causes "Program Not Responding" when data displayed fills view and vertical scrollbar appears

ChimeraI am working in Visual Studio 2010 .NET 4.0 in C# using WinForms. The form has a single DataGridView that is data bound to a DataSet. The DataSet is being populated from a Thread that is processing data being read from a ConcurrentQueue. The code is also using a semaphore to serialize access t...

data is pulled from the model, and then pushed to the view, by the controller.
21:23
I don't think so.
Microsoft:
"What do we call this thing, that isn't the View or the Model?"
"We'll call it the ViewModel, since it goes between 'em, right?"
"Ah-yup."
@Kendall - And what is the basis for that thought?
I was (self) taught that the Controller doesn't update the View, only the Model.
then wouldn't be called MCV?
21:25
What is the point of having a controller then in your scenario?
@StephanM MVC rolls off the tongue better, since MC causes phonetic clashing.
Tightly couple your model to your business logic, and push it out to your tightly coupled view. Nothing wrong there, as long as you never want to re-use any of that.
MVVM looks like Madonan on all 4s
@TravisJ To provide a uniform interface for modifying the Model.
I don't claim to be a pro.
Wikipedia says: "A controller can send commands to its associated view to change the view's presentation of the model (e.g., by scrolling through a document). It can send commands to the model to update the model's state (e.g., editing a document)."
@StephanM Madonan? You mean Madonna?
21:28
Sigh
It doesn't say anything about a Controller acting as a Presenter.
@Shotgun Ninja yea
@KendallFrey Why are you still confused? I just told ya how it works :P
It's a general misconception.
You know, like Referer and Referrer in HTTP headers :P
Travis is confusing me.
@RoelvanUden What's that?
I never mentioned "Presenter", that was @Roel's misconception
21:30
When developing HTTP protocol they called the Referrer 'Referer'.. a typo.
HTTP referer[sic] (originally a misspelling of referrer) is an HTTP header field that identifies the address of the webpage (i.e. the URI or IRI) that linked to the resource being requested. By checking the referer, the new webpage can see where the request originated. In the most common situation this means that when a user clicks a hyperlink in a web browser, the browser sends a request to the server holding the destination webpage. The request includes the referer field, which says the last page the user was on (the one where he/she clicked the link). Referer logging is used to allow ...
Everyone knows. Nobody fixed it :P
hahahaha
@TravisJ Yeah, but you described it.
Never before has a typo been that historically significant. Except when Kennedy called himself a jelly doughnut.
21:31
@Kendall - I described a model view controller system.
> data is pulled from the model, and then pushed to the view, by the controller presenter.
@TravisJ Not according to my books.
@Kendall - What books? You mean your "thoughts".
And Wikipedia.
No, the books are correct Kendall. :)
Travis is just using the general misconception.
2 against 1! I win!
21:32
@Roel - Yeah, me and
You should have seen the students in my course design patterns
Massive conflicts :P
How many does he count for?
What of him?
Uh.. what was the god of design patterns called again.. um
Lemme ruffle up some books
@RoelvanUden Gang of 4, or something?
21:33
Please some books
or the more contemporary Head-First Design Patterns?
@ShotgunNinja - gang of four
Patterns of Enterprise Application Architecture by Martin Fowler
not that =/
21:34
Design Patterns: Elements of Reusable Object-Oriented Software is a software engineering book describing recurring solutions to common problems in software design. The book's authors are Erich Gamma, Richard Helm, Ralph Johnson and John Vlissides with a foreword by Grady Booch. The authors are often referred to as the Gang of Four, GoF, or Go4. The book is divided into two parts, with the first two chapters exploring the capabilities and pitfalls of object-oriented programming, and the remaining chapters describing 23 classic software design patterns. The book includes examples in C++ an...
How many of the most famous GoF patterns are thought of as anti-patterns today?
I will offer up a LARGE number of Bounty points if anybody can help me solve this problem.
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/14165159/c-sharp-datagridview-causes-program-not-responding-when-data-displayed-fills-v
"Divide GUI widgets into a controller (for reacting to user stimulus) and view (for displaying the state of the model). Controller and view should (mostly) not communicate directly but through the model."
@JohanLarsson Singleton is one
That is MVC. The real one. Now the one everyone on the web uses. That's MVP called incorrectly as MVC. :)
21:35
It is not incorrect, you just have a misconception of the pattern, which you seem to place on everyone else.
@Chimera Just a warning, don't become a vampire...
@ShotgunNinja What do you mean?
@Chimera Visitor is another?
@Chimera Guess I misread your posting. Sorry for the false accusations.
@JohanLarsson not sure... haven't heard of that one.
21:37
@RoelvanUden I thought the View works with the Controller directly. Or are buttons/menus not part of the View?
@TravisJ We'll leave it at that. There are two camps, the traditional ones that all know MVC as described by Martin Fowler and the web camps who know the controller to be something that pulls data from the model and throws it at the view.
@ShotgunNinja No problem.
@KendallFrey The controller handles input, clicking things and whatnot. The controller does something with the model. The model goes, "Hey ok, let's tell everyone who's observing me about the change" and that causes the view to change accordingly.
Anyway, that is the traditional MVC. This will be debated. A lot. Mostly people telling you that the view should not be aware of the model.
I've been working on that damn issue for nearly three days, and I just can't seem to be able to find the problem. In other parts of the code I do the same sort of things but it seems something is different about the DataGridView and it's vertical scrollbar.
(I agree on that, it makes sense to separate that more. It is not MVC tho)
21:39
So, if I have a button that, for example, sets a flag on the Model, that button isn't part of the View?
Would that be classed in the Controller, or somewhere in between?
Sorry for the confusion guys, it's all my mistake about MVC.
@KendallFrey The button you see IS on the view, but the ACTION it undertakes is handled by a controller.
Seems fair.
@linguini Thanks for the on-topic discussion.
Nobody's mentioned sex for a while. Whoops
Yeah it has been a nice read, ty guys
When you tightly couple the view to the model, you are no longer using the mvc design pattern
And you can push your personal jargon on others, but the overwhelming majority disagrees with you.
21:43
Define 'tightly couple'.
@TravisJ I think that might be true for all of them MVVM, MVP & MVC?
I would be so grateful to you guys, if some one could be tell this is a (decent) MVC approach?? skydrive.live.com/…
Does binding the View to properties of the Model count as tight binding?
GW time, AFKish. I'd love to continue the discussion if you please at a different time :)
21:44
@KendallFrey Is that a WPF binding?
@linguini Maybe I can look into it some other time.
@JohanLarsson That, or something similar.
:7017343 it's a entire test project for my undestanding
@ShotgunNinja thank u
@linguini Yeah, I was being an idiot there for a second.
I would say that anytime you go from the view to the model you have broken the MVVM pattern.
21:48
@StephanM What about the view to the viewmodel to the model?
@ShotgunNinja for what?
@StephanM I'd say the same.
@ShotgunNinja that is MVVM
@linguini For thinking you were linking us to a running example of a page, rather than a SkyDrive-hosted zip of your project files. I've been doing this Web programming crap for too long.
@KendallFrey What do you think, I think it is about as untight coupling as anything can be. To me it is just a string pointing to a property that hopefully is there (resolved at runtime)
21:49
But would you say that about MVC?
@ShotgunNinja it's a winforms mvc
In the MVVM Pattern the view should really have no code behind. the code behind is all in the view model
@KendallFrey I don't know the other enough to tell them apart, binding a View to a property on the model is np for me, I do that a lot. The other way is more problematic imo, would not like any view stuff in the model.
@JohanLarsson Sorry, wasn't talking to you.
21:51
I keep getting "Error creating the window handle"
@JohanLarsson But as to your last sentence, I agree 100.000000000001% (Sorry, rounding error)
@StephanM Prude! MVCVM is way easier.
Is that like a threesome?
LOL
Wow that comment shut things down
fapfapfapfapfapfap
4
21:59
I keep getting "Error creating the window handle" on embedding a form, that has an embedded form inside of it, in a panel.

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