I am trying to come up with a good way of implementing the MVVM pattern using Entity-Framework where my entities are my models. My DataContext
is my viewmodel. This is a small reproduction of the problem.
View
<TextBox Text="{Binding MyText}" />
ViewModel:
I have the requirement of needing to navigate record by record from my DB. When a button is clicked in the View a command is sent to the Viewmodel that executes nextRecord()
. EF does its magic and _myObject
is the next row/record from the database
public class myViewModel: INotifyPropertyChanged
{
private MyEntityObject _myObject;
public string MyText
{
get { return _myObject.MyText; }
set
{
if (_myObject.MyText != value)
{
_myObject.MyText = value;
OnPropertyChanged("MyText");
}
}
}
private void _nextRecord()
{
_myObject = myEntitiesContext.NextRecord() //pseudocode
}
}
Autogenerated Entity Model
public partial class MyEntityObject
{
public string MyText { get; set; }
}
Since the View has no knowledge of _myObject
changing, it doesn't update when _myObject
changes. A few approaches I have thought of.
I haven't tested wrapping my entities in a
INotifyPropertyChanged
wrapper class but am wary to do this as I have a lot of entity objects.I could call
OnPropertyChanged("...")
for all properties, but some of my entities have a lot of properties to them, which would be ugly. Possible to use reflection to make it cleaner, but I may have properties that aren't databound.I might be able to defer this to the UI, somehow refreshing the bindings when I click "Next Record", but this breaks MVVM and looks dirty
How can I get the UI to recognize changes from _myObject
?
NextRecord
isn't a real method, I just wanted to hide the implementation details for getting the next record since they are unimportant for the problem. But what you said is essentially my 2nd approach. The issue is that it isn't scalable to say, 15-20 properties, where you are in the position of needing to callOnPropertyChanged
15-20 timesOnPropertyChanged
and it's something you'll have to remember to update/change whenever the properties change. I'm thinking I could leverage reflection to fix that but haven't tested that yet.