I have been wondering for a while, after asking different people and without any of them providing what I would call an "at least a bit concrete answer":
Question:
Where, in an iPhone application should an application keep the references to it's Model Classes (using the MVC approach) ?
In iPhone (and Cocoa) applications we have what we call the "App Delegate", which basically start's up our application and inits our controllers, also handles UITouch events.
So is the App Delegate a controller ? a model class ? none of the two ? I think not knowing that also makes confusing to know where to put the Model References.
Example:
You have the Application Delegate, that delegate contains a reference to your Application's View Controller. If my Application would use Model Class A ( which is a webserver daemon class ), and a Class B which stores data queried by that webserver.
Where would you guys store the references to A and B ? (App Delegate ? View Controller ? Both ? )
There are many options here, but as an example, I would really like to know how would you guys use mvc to put together this application which only uses one View.
I find that in most instances, AppDelegate provides a good place to place some base functionality (such as a a background image you want applied in every controller), but that you'll want to have additional controllers and model code elsewhere. A navController or rootController would often be placed as a property on your AppDelegate.
So, I would say that is somewhere between "neither" and "controller", but leaning more towards "neither". Definitely not "model"!
Traditionally the controller creates the Model and then initialises the View with that model. The controller then listens to changes in the model and view and coordinates the flow of the program through this. That would be my generic answer, maybe things in practice would be different for iPhone development.
It is tempting to put everything in the AppDelegate, but if you start doing this, then your AppDelegate will be full of reference hacks. If you are doing a strict MVC, then you should have 3 things:
So for example, I have a model Foo and a Foo controller. I would have:
And finally, to answer your question, I would store my references to Foo's in the foo Controller. I like to use singletons for my controllers, but thats just me. If you do use a singleton, you can just do something like this:
[[FooController sharedInstance] listOfFoos]
to get your Foo'sIn my applications I usually rename the AppDelegate class to AppController, if that helps explain things better conceptually. Your app controller is responsible for creating and/or configuring the model controller (which manages your collection of model objects) and window or view controllers, setting up references between them if needed, and calling methods on these controllers in response to NSApplication delegate methods or high level action methods from the main menu. Depending on how complex your application is you might also have additional model or view controllers which are created outside your app controller.
Of course if you have a simple application there's no real reason not to have your app controller play the role of the model controller if you want. What you want to avoid is file with hundreds of lines of code, all doing conceptually unrelated tasks.
The controller layer keeps references to the model layer.
The App Delegate is a controller.
A and B are model classes that would usually be created and owned by the controller layer.
The purpose of the controller layer is to allow the model and view layers to be self-contained. The model shouldn't know anything about the controller or view layers. The view shouldn't know anything about the controller or model layers. The controller's job is to be a double-ended adapter to the model on one side and the view on the other.
I would set up your example app like this:
It's not clear in the question what the purpose of class B is.