I'm writing a Swing application, and further to my previous question, have settled on using the Model-View-Presenter pattern to separate the user interface from the business logic.
When my application starts up, it executes the following code:
Model model = new BasicModel();
Presenter presenter = new Presenter(model);
View view = new SwingView(presenter);
presenter.setView(view);
presenter.init();
which creates the user interface. Events are generated by the View, and delegated to the Presenter. The Presenter then manipulates the Model and updates the View accordingly.
In order to handle some events, I need to obtain further information from the user. In the case of these events, I believe it is appropriate for the Swing view to spawn a new JDialog window.
One line of thinking makes me feel this might be appropriate code in the orignal Presenter:
public void handlePreferences() {
Preferences prefs = view.getPreferences();
model.setPreferences(prefs);
}
That is, the contents of each JDialog should represent a distinct object that should be retrieved from the View and updated in the Model. However, this leaves the question: do I create a new Model to represent the Preferences object and a new Presenter for event handling in that JDialog?
It seems to me that creating a new Presenter and Model internal to the original View forces me to do a lot of work that would be harder to port if I wanted to change the UI to use JSF, for example.
Please feel free to add comments for clarification.
