I guess that you expected something more fundamental then just pass some button action to controller.
I always follow MVC pattern in case of model/view/controller collaboration. It resolve your issue and many other. And I want to share my experience.
- Separate controller from view and model: don't put all of the "business logic" into view-related classes; this makes the code very unusable. Make controller classes to host this code, but ensure that the controller classes don't make too many assumptions about the presentation.
- Define callback APIs with
@protocol
, using @optional
if not all the methods are required.
- For view define protocol like
<view class name>Protocol
(example NewsViewProtocol). For controller define delegate like <view class name>Delegate
(example NewsViewDelegate) and dataSource like <view class name>DataSource
(example NewsViewDataSource). Keep all this @protocols in one separate file named <view class name>Protocol.h
(example NewsViewProtocol.h)
Short example:
Contents of NewsView.h
//
// NewsView.h
@interface NewsView : UIView <NewsViewProtocol> {
@protected
NSObject* delegate_;
NSObject* dataSource_;
}
@end
Contents of NewsController.h and .m
//
// NewsController.h
@interface NewsController : UIViewController <NewsViewDataSource, NewsViewDelegate> {
}
@property (nonatomic, weak) UIView<NewsViewProtocol>* customView;
@end
@implementation NewsController
- (void)viewDidLoad {
[super viewDidLoad];
self.customView = (UIView<NewsViewProtocol>*)self.view;
[self.customView setDelegate:self];
[self.customView setDataSource:self];
}
@end
Contents of NewsViewProtocol.h
//
// NewsViewProtocol.h
@protocol NewsViewProtocol;
@protocol NewsViewDelegate<NSObject>
@optional
- (void)someAction;
- (void)newsView:(UIView<NewsViewProtocol>*)newsView didSelectItemAtIndexPath:(NSIndexPath *)indexPath;
@end
@protocol NewsViewDataSource<NSObject>
@required
- (id)newsView:(UIView<NewsViewProtocol>*)newsView itemAtIndexPath:(NSIndexPath *)indexPath;
- (NSInteger)numberOfItemsInNewsView:(UIView<NewsViewProtocol>*)newsView section:(NSInteger)section;
- (BOOL)newsView:(UIView<NewsViewProtocol>*)newsView shouldDisplaySection:(NSInteger)section;
@end
@protocol NewsViewProtocol<NSObject>
@required
//Never retain delegate instance into implementation of this method
- (void)setDelegate:(NSObject<NewsViewDelegate>*)delegate;
//Never retain delegate instance into implementation of this method
- (void)setDataSource:(NSObject<NewsViewDataSource>*)dataSource;
- (void)reload;
@end
You may consider that it is redundant. In simple view controller, YES. But if you develop very complex screen with huge amount of data then it gives you some advantages as:
- Helps you to separate responsibility between view and controller.
- Keeps your code clear.
- Makes you code more reusable.