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View Model Patterns and usage in ASP.NET MVC3 (Also, using EF 4.1)

开发者 https://www.devze.com 2023-03-19 13:01 出处:网络
I have been searching for an answer to this question for days and it is driving me insane. Currently I am working on a project using ASP.NET MVC 3 and am trying to utilize a ViewModel per controller a

I have been searching for an answer to this question for days and it is driving me insane. Currently I am working on a project using ASP.NET MVC 3 and am trying to utilize a ViewModel per controller approach as has been suggested by so many articles and tutorials I have checked out. To better illistrate what I am asking I will outline below:

Lets say I have a pretty simple and straight forward model. Users, Customers, Addresses, Phone Numbers, Orders, Products, Categories, etc... When a user registers for a new account on my site I would like to: 1) create an account for them (this is just an account id, customer type) 2) Add their customer demographic data to Customers 3) Add N-addresses and address types 4) Add N-phone numbers with type as well.

As far as I have got is deciding that I need a RegisterCustomerForRegistrationControllerViewModel. My predicament is what does this model look like? I am trying to be as DRY as possible yet when implementing this pattern I seem to repeat myself at each turn. At what level do I put DataAnnotations for validatio开发者_运维百科n? So do I simply new up a new Customer() even if I only want to use one property from the class in a given ViewModel?

I'm not even confident at this point that this is a correct assumption. There seems to be so much opinion on the topic yet so few concrete examples of implementation. I am hoping someone can point me in the right direction and maybe present some code snippets along the way... I hope this is all clear enough and if not please feel free to ask follow up questions.

Again, Thanks in advance!


Repeating simple properties across two distinct layers of an application is not a violation of DRY. Its just good design.

DataAnnotations go on ViewModels.

ViewModel will look something like

public class RegisterCustomerViewModel
{
    [Required]
    public string Name { get; set; }
    public List<AddressViewModels> Addresses { get; set; }
    public List<PhoneNumberViewModel> PhoneNumbers { get; set; |

} 


Just like jfar, I would take a simple approache: one view, one view model with DataAnnotations.

That being said... I know how you feel (not confident) and I understand because I've been through that myself. My conclusions: unless you consider your web application to require the overhead of so many layers, principles and patterns, keep it simple. I believe that there is no perfect architecture. There's just what works and there's overhead. Sometime, what works is indeed complexe. Ask yourself if you need that complexity.

Take my first sentence as an answer to your question and the rest as my humble opinion.

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