1

Given multiple questions excellent_informative_for_me - trashgod's answer, that, and that and several others that do not answer my question,
how should one design classes in regard to ActionListeners location
(and overall MVC separation - more explained below).

TOC

  1. Question explained
  2. Tree of files structure of my example (4)
  3. Compile/clean commands for sources (4)
  4. Sources

1. question explained

I've read about MVC, and I presume I understood most of it, let us assume that is true, for the sake of this question. Not going into details:

  1. View is produced from Model, on Controller request.
    In most implementations View has access to Model instance.
  2. Controller interacts with user, propagates changes to Model and View.
  3. Model is, in extreme simplification, container for data.
    It can be observed by View.

Now, my confusion concerns ActionListeners - which class should register - and in turn also contain - code for buttons, or in fact code for most View elements, that aren't actually just indicators, but Model manipulators?

Let's say, that we have two items in View - button to change Model data and some visual item used ONLY to change View appearance. It seems reasonable to leave code responsible for changing View appearance in View class. My question relates to first case. I had several ideas:

  • View creates buttons, so it's kind of natural to create ActionListeners, and register callbacks at the same time, in View. But this requires that View had code related to model, breaking encapsulation. View was supposed to know only little about underlying Controller or Model, talking to it via Observer only.
  • I could expose View items like buttons, etc and attach ActionListeners to them from Controller, but this again breaks encapsulation.
  • I could implement somewhat of a callback, for each button - View would ask controller if it has any code that is supposed to be registered as ActionListener for given button name, but this seems overly complicated, and would require synchronization of names between controller and view.
  • I could assume, being sane ;), that buttons in TableFactory might be made public, allow injecting ActionListeners to any code.
  • Controller could replace whole View items (creating button and replacing existing one) but this seems insane, as its not it's role

2. tree of files structure of my example (4)

.
└── test
    ├── controllers
    │   └── Controller.java
    ├── models
    │   └── Model.java
    ├── resources
    │   └── a.properties
    ├── Something.java
    └── views
        ├── TableFactory.java
        └── View.java

3. compile/clean commands for sources (4)

Compile with:

  • javac test/Something.java test/models/*.java test/controllers/*.java test/views/*.java

Run with:

  • java test.Something

Clean with:

  • find . -iname "*.class" -exec rm {} \;

4. sources

This code contains also internationalization stub, for which I asked separate question, those lines are clearly marked and should not have any impact on answer.

Controllers => Controller.java
package test.controllers;
import test.models.Model;
import test.views.View;
public class Controller {
// Stub - doing nothing for now.
}
Models => Model.java
package test.models;
import java.util.Observable;
public class Model extends Observable {
}
Something.java
package test;

import test.views.View;
import test.models.Model;
import test.controllers.Controller;

public class Something {

    Model m;
    View v;
    Controller c;

    Something() {
        initModel();
        initView();
        initController();
    }

    private void initModel() {
        m = new Model();
    }

    private void initView() {
        v = new View(m);
    }
    private void initController() {
        c = new Controller(m, v);
    }

    public static void main(String[] args) {
        javax.swing.SwingUtilities.invokeLater(new Runnable() {
            public void run() {
                Something it = new Something();
            }
        });
    }
}
View => View.java
package test.views;

import java.awt.*;              // layouts
import javax.swing.*;           // JPanel

import java.util.Observer;      // MVC => model
import java.util.Observable;    // MVC => model
import test.models.Model;       // MVC => model

import test.views.TableFactory;

public class View {

    private JFrame root;
    private Model model;
    public JPanel root_panel;

    public View(Model model){
        root = new JFrame("some tests");
        root.setDefaultCloseOperation(JFrame.EXIT_ON_CLOSE);
        root_panel = new JPanel();

        root_panel.add(new TableFactory(new String[]{"a", "b", "c"}));

        this.model = model;
        this.model.addObserver(new ModelObserver());

        root.add(root_panel);
        root.pack();
        root.setLocationRelativeTo(null);
        root.setVisible(true);
    }
}

class ModelObserver implements Observer {

    @Override
    public void update(Observable o, Object arg) {
        System.out.print(arg.toString());
        System.out.print(o.toString());
    }
}
View => TableFactory.java
package test.views;

import java.awt.*;
import java.awt.event.*;
import java.util.*;
import javax.swing.*;
import javax.swing.table.DefaultTableModel;

public class TableFactory extends JPanel {

    private String[] cols;
    private String[] buttonNames;
    private Map<String, JButton> buttons;
    private JTable table;

    TableFactory(String[] cols){

        this.cols = cols;
        buttonNames = new String[]{"THIS", "ARE", "BUTTONS"};
        commonInit();
    }
    TableFactory(String[] cols, String[] buttons){

        this.cols = cols;
        this.buttonNames = buttons;
        commonInit();
    }

    private void commonInit(){

        this.buttons = makeButtonMap(buttonNames);
        DefaultTableModel model = new DefaultTableModel();
        this.table = new JTable(model);
        for (String col: this.cols)
            model.addColumn(col);

        setLayout(new BoxLayout(this, BoxLayout.PAGE_AXIS));

        JPanel buttons_container = new JPanel(new GridLayout(1, 0));
        for (String name : buttonNames){
            buttons_container.add(buttons.get(name));
        }

        JScrollPane table_container = new JScrollPane(table);

        this.removeAll();
        this.add(buttons_container);
        this.add(table_container);
        this.repaint();
    }

    private Map<String, JButton> makeButtonMap(String[] cols){
        Map<String, JButton>  buttons = new HashMap<String, JButton>(cols.length);
        for (String name : cols){
            buttons.put(name, new JButton(name));
        }
        return buttons;
    }
}

EDIT (in response to comments below)


Next informative sources here

After some more thought I understood Olivier's comment and later Hovercraft full of eels's details... javax.swing.Action => setAction was my way to go. Controller accesses View's JPanels, get's reference to map containing buttons or any JComponent, and adds action to it. View has no clue what is in Controllers code. I'll update this answer when I make it work nicely, so anyone that stumbles here might have it.

Only two things that worries me are (both pretty rare, but still):

  1. since I make View's method of adding action public, actually i trust anyone to add it only from controller or view. But had the model had access to view - it could override actions too.
  2. overriding, too. If I set some object's action, and then forget and set another action from different place, it's just gone, which might make debugging hard.
9
  • 3
    If you want to totally decouple Swing as view, you should create your ActionListeners in your view. Also, you should then think about using javax.swing.Action instead of ActionListener where possible. Dec 4, 2015 at 13:47
  • 1
    The view can have ActionListeners added to JButtons, but you could have the listener simply call a Control method, or change the state of a view "bounded" property, one that on change notifies listeners to the view, by calling one of the view's property change support's notify methods. Or go @OlivierGrégoire's route and use AbstractActions, and these can be "injected" into the view via the control if need be. Dec 4, 2015 at 13:50
  • 1
    Olivier - I'm not quite sure for now do I want to decouple them. Perhaps the effort is not worth in long run? @HovercraftFullOfEels - I understand that You mentioned my 1'st bullet, and 3'rd bullet? I'm not sure if I follow exact sense of sentence starting from "change state of view bounded property" - could You please rephrase, maybe elaborate or just use somewhat simpler words?
    – JustMe
    Dec 4, 2015 at 13:55
  • 1
    Note, you don't "expose" buttons and what not. You expose public methods only that allow for addition of listeners or actions. Regarding "bound" properties, check the JavaBean Properties Tutorial. Note that Swing GUI's have innate support for these since every Swing component has its own SwingPropertyChangeSupport field. Dec 4, 2015 at 14:01
  • 1
    @JustMe: you only listen to the properties that you want to respond to. For example. Dec 4, 2015 at 14:22

3 Answers 3

1

While the Model–View–Controller pattern is no panacea, it is a recurrent pattern in Swing application design. As noted here, Swing control components are frequently part of the view containment hierarchy: A Swing application's controller may have little to do but connect such components to a relevant listener; instances of Action, which "can be used to separate functionality and state from a component," are particularly convenient. In this example, the Reset handler, a simple ActionListener, is nested in the controller, but it could just as well be exported from the model as an Action. As suggested here, you may have to experiment with different designs. Several approaches are cited here.

1

While @trashgod answer summarizes and extends to some degree discussion from comments, I'm posting, ugly (but working) solution based on that discussion (implementing Action in Controller class)

What had to change?

  1. TableFactory - added public void setObjectAction(Action a, JButton b) and allowed public access to Map<String, JButton> buttons

  2. Controller class needed implementation of AbstractAction or class that inherits from it, and code that sets object of this class to View's deeply nested JComponent. I find that part quite ugly, and I'm not sure if this approach is sane, or is there any better solution (will check Hovercraft full of eels Beans sometime later).

  3. No additional changes were needed yet I modified View.java a little to show purpose of this question slightly better, or in different light (this makes View.java more than MCVE but IMHO describes purpose better)

TableFactory.java

package test.views;

import java.awt.*;
import java.awt.event.*;
import java.util.*;
import javax.swing.*;
import javax.swing.table.DefaultTableModel;
import javax.swing.Action;

public class TableFactory extends JPanel {

    private String[] cols;
    private String[] buttonNames;
    public Map<String, JButton> buttons;
    private JTable table;

    TableFactory(String[] cols){
        this.cols = cols;
        buttonNames = new String[]{"some", "buttons"};
        commonInit();
    }
    TableFactory(String[] cols, String[] buttons){

        this.cols = cols;
        this.buttonNames = buttons;
        commonInit();
    }

    private void commonInit(){

        this.buttons = makeButtonMap(buttonNames);

        DefaultTableModel model = new DefaultTableModel();
        this.table = new JTable(model);
        for (String col: this.cols)
            model.addColumn(col);

        setLayout(new BoxLayout(this, BoxLayout.PAGE_AXIS));

        JPanel buttons_container = new JPanel(new GridLayout(1, 0));
        for (String name : buttonNames){
            buttons_container.add(buttons.get(name));
        }

        JScrollPane table_container = new JScrollPane(table);

        this.removeAll();
        this.add(buttons_container);
        this.add(table_container);
        this.repaint();
    }

    private Map<String, JButton> makeButtonMap(String[] cols){
        Map<String, JButton>  buttons = new HashMap<String, JButton>(cols.length);
        for (String name : cols){
            buttons.put(name, new JButton(name));
        }
        return buttons;
    }

    public void setObjectAction(Action a, JButton b){
        //it might be possible to set actions to something else than button, I imagine JComponent, but I havent figured out yet how
        b.setAction(a);
    }
}

View.java

package test.views;

import java.awt.*;              // layouts
import javax.swing.*;           // JPanel

import java.util.Observer;      // MVC => model
import java.util.Observable;    // MVC => model
import test.models.Model;       // MVC => model

import test.views.TableFactory;

public class View {

    private JFrame root;
    private Model model;
    public JPanel root_panel;
    public JPanel some_views[];

    public View(Model model){
        root = new JFrame("some tests");
        root.setDefaultCloseOperation(JFrame.EXIT_ON_CLOSE);
        root_panel = new JPanel();

        some_views = new JPanel[] { 
                       new TableFactory(new String[]{"a", "b", "c"}),
                       new TableFactory(new String[]{"e", "e"}) };
        JTabbedPane tabs = new JTabbedPane();
        for (JPanel tab: some_views){
            String name = tab.getClass().getSimpleName();
            tabs.addTab(name, null, tab, name);
            //tab.setObjectAction(action, (JComponent) button); // can set internal 'decorative' View's action here, that are not interacting with Model
            // for example, add new (empty) row to JTable, as this does not modify Model (yet)
        }
        root_panel.add(tabs);


        this.model = model;
        this.model.addObserver(new ModelObserver());

        root.add(root_panel);
        root.pack();
        root.setLocationRelativeTo(null);
        root.setVisible(true);
    }
}

class ModelObserver implements Observer {

    @Override
    public void update(Observable o, Object arg) {
        System.out.print(arg.toString());
        System.out.print(o.toString());
    }
}

Controller.java

package test.controllers;

import test.models.Model;
import test.views.View;


import javax.swing.Action;
import java.awt.event.*;
import test.views.TableFactory;
import javax.swing.*;

public class Controller {
    private Model model;
    private View view;
    public Controller(Model model, View view){
        this.model = model;
        this.view = view;

        ((test.views.TableFactory)view.some_views[0]).setObjectAction(
            (Action) new ModelTouchingAction("move along, nothing here"),
            ((test.views.TableFactory)view.some_views[0]).buttons.get("FIRST") );
    }

    class ModelTouchingAction extends AbstractAction { 
        public ModelTouchingAction(String text) {
            super(text);
        }
        public void actionPerformed(ActionEvent e) {
            System.out.print("Invoked: " + e.toString());
        }
    }
}
6
  • Extending AbstractAction is abstract, so you have to extend it. It lets controls (e.g. buttons , menus, popups and tool bars) share functionality in a consistent way.
    – trashgod
    Dec 4, 2015 at 22:44
  • @trashgod - You re right about abstract. About MCVE I'd be happy to do that if You're willing to point what is redundant or unnecessary in Your opinion. All of this has already been trimmed down. I am going to cut down pieces regarding internationalization, and copy them to second question, but that's about it, i find no other parts delete-able as this question mainly focuses on architecture, which also is keeping current directory structure as is.
    – JustMe
    Dec 7, 2015 at 19:40
  • 1
    One thing you could do is to create one file for the whole program. You could still have multiple classes in that file, but only one would be public, and that would hold the main method. Why is this important? This makes it easy to copy and paste the whole thing en toto into our IDE's, allowing us to more easily test your code. Dec 7, 2015 at 21:08
  • Agreed, but this would require to redesign class permissions, as they are in different packages, with different access. But You made good point so I'll do it.
    – JustMe
    Dec 7, 2015 at 21:32
  • Thanks for pursuing this; I agree with @HovercraftFullOfEels' rationale regarding a self-contained minimal reproducible example; note that the controller needs to know about the Action, but it need not contain it; Swing text components use package-private access to make relevant actions available internally.
    – trashgod
    Dec 7, 2015 at 23:17
1

Working version, compacted to single Something.java file.
Run with javac Something.java && java Something

import java.util.*;
import java.util.Observer;
import java.util.Observable;
import java.awt.*;
import java.awt.event.*;
import javax.swing.*;
import javax.swing.table.DefaultTableModel;

class Controller {
    private enum TYPE { RESET, ADD, DEL };
    private Model model;
    private View view;
    public Controller(Model model, View view){
        this.model = model;
        this.view = view;
        ((TableFactory) view.tf).setObjectAction(
            (Action) new ModelTouchingAction("reset*",TYPE.RESET),
            "BUTTON1" );
        ((TableFactory) view.tf).setObjectAction(
            (Action) new ModelTouchingAction("add*",TYPE.ADD),
            "BUTTON2" );
        ((TableFactory) view.tf).setObjectAction(
            (Action) new ModelTouchingAction("del*",TYPE.DEL),
            "BUTTON3" );
    }

    class ModelTouchingAction extends AbstractAction {
        private TYPE t;
        public ModelTouchingAction(String text, TYPE type) {
            super(text);
            this.t = type;
        }
        public void actionPerformed(ActionEvent e) {
            if(this.t == TYPE.ADD)
                model.add();
            else if(this.t == TYPE.DEL)
                model.del();
            else
                model.reset();
        }
    }
}

class Model extends Observable {
    private ArrayList<String[]> data;
    private static int cnt = 0;
    Model(){ reset(); }
    public void reset(){
        data = new ArrayList<String[]>();
        data.add(new String[]{"cell a1", "cell a2", "cell a3"});
        data.add(new String[]{"cell b1", "cell b2", "cell b3"});
        info();
    }
    public void add(){
        cnt++;
        data.add(new String[]{String.valueOf(cnt++), 
                 String.valueOf(cnt++), String.valueOf(cnt++)});
        info();
    }
    public void del(){
        if (data.size()>0){
            data.remove(data.size() - 1);
            info();
        }
    }
    private void info(){ setChanged();  notifyObservers(); }
    public ArrayList<String[]> get(){ return data; }
}

public class Something {

    Model m;
    View v;
    Controller c;
    Something() {
        initModel();
        initView();
        initController();
    }

    private void initModel() {
        m = new Model();
    }
    private void initView() {
        v = new View(m);
    }
    private void initController() {
        c = new Controller(m, v);
    }

    public static void main(String[] args) {
        javax.swing.SwingUtilities.invokeLater(new Runnable() {
            public void run() {
                Something it = new Something();
            }
        });
    }
}

class View {

    private JFrame root;
    private Model model;
    public JPanel root_panel;
    public TableFactory tf;

    public View(Model model){
        root = new JFrame("some tests");
        root.setDefaultCloseOperation(JFrame.EXIT_ON_CLOSE);
        root_panel = new JPanel();
        tf = new TableFactory(new String[]{"col1", "col2", "col3"});
        root_panel.add(tf);

        this.model = model;
        this.model.addObserver(new ModelObserver(tf));

        root.add(root_panel);
        root.pack();
        root.setLocationRelativeTo(null);
        root.setVisible(true);
    }
}

class ModelObserver implements Observer {
    TableFactory tf;
    ModelObserver(TableFactory tf){ this.tf = tf; }
    @Override
    public void update(Observable o, Object arg) {
        if (null != o)
            this.tf.populate(((Model) o).get());
            // view reloads ALL from model, optimize it
            // check what to check to get CMD from Observable
        else
            System.out.print("\nobservable is null");
        if (null != arg)
            System.out.print(arg.toString());
        else
            System.out.print("\narg is null. No idea if it should be.");
    }
}

class TableFactory extends JPanel {

    private String[] cols;
    public String[] buttonNames;
    private Map<String, JButton> buttons;
    private JTable table;

    TableFactory(String[] cols){

        this.cols = cols;
        buttonNames = new String[]{"BUTTON1", "BUTTON2", "BUTTON3"};
        commonInit();
    }
    TableFactory(String[] cols, String[] buttons){

        this.cols = cols;
        this.buttonNames = buttons;
        commonInit();
    }

    private void commonInit(){

        this.buttons = makeButtonMap(buttonNames);
        DefaultTableModel tabModel = new DefaultTableModel();
        this.table = new JTable(tabModel);
        for (String col: this.cols)
            tabModel.addColumn(col);

        setLayout(new BoxLayout(this, BoxLayout.PAGE_AXIS));

        JPanel buttons_container = new JPanel(new GridLayout(1, 0));
        for (String name : buttonNames){
            buttons_container.add(buttons.get(name));
        }

        JScrollPane table_container = new JScrollPane(table);

        this.removeAll();
        this.add(buttons_container);
        this.add(table_container);
        this.repaint();
    }
    public void populate(ArrayList<String[]> data){
        ((DefaultTableModel) table.getModel()).setRowCount(0);
        for(String[] row:data) addRow(row); 
    }
    private void addRow(String[] row){
        ((DefaultTableModel) table.getModel()).addRow(row);
        // this is actually called only by populate, model does not have single 
        // row update here (and onUpdate ModelObserver cannot differentiate 
        // yet what method to call on Observable, TODO: check CMD? )
    }
    private void delRow(int rowID){
        System.out.print("\nJPanel should be deleting table row " + rowID);
    }
    public void setObjectAction(Action action, String buttonName){
        buttons.get(buttonName).setAction(action);
    }
    private Map<String, JButton> makeButtonMap(String[] cols){
        Map<String, JButton>  buttons = new HashMap<String, JButton>(cols.length);
        for (String name : cols){
            buttons.put(name, new JButton(name));
        }
        return buttons;
    }
}
1
  • Kudos for a complete example; also consider letting TYPE values implement an interface to simplify ModelTouchingAction.
    – trashgod
    Dec 8, 2015 at 1:58

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