Typically a BirdMorph would hold a Bird in an instance variable, and update its own position in its step
method.
Think of it this way: Every object needs to be "held" somewhere. If there is no reference to it, it gets garbage-collected automatically. In Morphic, that reference is normally rooted in the World
, every morph is referenced via its container's submorphs
collection.
So it makes sense then that your morph holds onto the "domain model". E.g. you might have an object BirdSimulation which holds all the Birds, and a window on screen holding onto the BirdSimulation. Then when you close the window, the simulation objects will be gone, too.
If your program is mainly visual you might not even need a separate Bird class. Instead, the morph could just be "a bird". That can simplify the design considerably.