Suppose upon a button click in the View, the ViewModel calls an asynchronous, long and tough calculation on the Model (with Model being business logic and data, as per Wikipedia). During this calculation the Model is spitting out one calculation result after the other (which are of a different kind, it's not like an ObservableCollection is useful here) and the View is supposed to display them the moment these part-results are ready.
How can it do that?
Via an EventAggregator? Caliburn Micro has one but that would mean I had to reference Caliburn Micro in my business logic - this can't be right, can it?
Via INPC? I have the impression that wherever I implement INPC, that class is going to be exposed to be bound to. I obviously wouldn't want a class with business logic exposed to the View just so I can bind to some of it's properties. So I'd need an indirection with a separate class (implementing INPC) whose properties I set from the business logic that the View can bind to. Now what I have done feels like creating a ViewModel that the model is tied to. - this can't be right either! (Not exposing it, but wrapping it with a ViewModel subscribing to PropertyChanged feels like a pretty severe violation of DRY)
So I guess I need to use plain old events? Having read Mark Seemans book and blog on DI I have the impression this is wrong too. Since subscribing to an event in the constructor is wrong. His suggestion is to reverse the logic and let the DI container inject an
IObserver<>
into the business model class, which will callNext()
on it. That would mean the ViewModel will implement potentially quite a fewIObserver<>
interfaces? Is that it?
I need a bit of guidance here, thanks!