I've recently started learning ASP.NET Model View Controller (MVC)
. It is very unique in the approach it takes for sites, I'm noticing the potential with dynamics
. Which will greatly improve maintenance.
But I can see how excessive use of dynamics
could be bad, especially if you deviate from the strongly typed model
. So my question is this...
I'm creating a layout, but I'd like the layout to be fluid
. I want the design to be changeable very easy without impacting my logic. I know you can create Master Pages
and Master Content Pages
which can hold a bulk of the layout for ease. Except that will still have limitations for my use.
Is there a way to change these Master Pages
and Master Content Pages
into true dynamic entities? Essentially a designer
could use a What you see is what you get field I create which allows the entire site to be modified?
My original thought was to store to create a dynamic layout
where each View
referenced a database; whatever those variables were would create the layout. But I'm not sure that is the best approach?
Any suggestions or thoughts for the best approach?
Please I'm not looking to start a debate, but if people could point me into a direction where I can research that method of implementation would be greatly helpful. That way I can find the best solution that will fit this projects need for a dynamic layout
.
Update:
To give background on this project, my company has several subsidiaries. Those subsidiaries will be utilizing the application but would like it tailored for there specific company. To avoid excessive design layouts I'd like to abstract
that portion.
That way my logic
will not be impacted, but the software be module enough to meet all our subsidiaries design needs without me having to customize every single one of them or risk a designer affecting the logic
.
Thank you for your assistance.
Update:
To help clarify, the goal is to allow the User Interface
to be decoupled from the application. In a normal Windows Application
I would utilize Inversion Of Control
to help segregate the interface and structure from the initial logic.
This decoupled approach is helpful, the goal is to decouple the interface in this case Razor Syntax
which would design create the structure. If you had a site:
<html>
<div id="Page-Container">
<div id="Header" />
<div id="Content" />
<div id="Footer" />
</div>
</html>
That structure would be static, but in my case I'd like it to be dynamic
. That way my logic can be abstracted through the structure but the designer can manipulate and change the page layout
however he'd like.