What you're describing is your model layer. There are two main ways to manage the model:
- At application startup, create the main model object and hand it to the first view controller.
- Make the main model object a Singleton.
The "main model object" in both cases is generally some kind of object manager. It could be a document, or it could be a PersonManager
if you have a bunch of Person
objects. This object will vend model objects from your persistence store (generally Core Data).
The advantage of a Singleton here is that it's a little easier to implement and you don't have to pass around the manager. The advantage of a non-Singleton is that it's easier to have more than one (for a document-based system), and it's easier to test and reason about non-singletons than singletons. That said, probably 80% of my projects use a singleton model manager.
As a side note, that you appear to already understand: never store the model in the application delegate, and never use the application delegate as a "rendezvous point" to get to the model. That is, never have a sharedModel
method on the application delegate. If you find yourself calling [[UIApplication sharedApplication] delegate]
anywhere in your code, you're almost always doing something wrong. Hanging data on the application delegate makes code reuse extremely difficult.