Say you have a menu item and a button that do the same task. Why is it bad practice to put the code for the task into one control's action event and then make a call to that event from the other control? Delphi allows this as does vb6 but realbasic doesn't and says you should put the code into a method that is then called by both the menu and the button
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It's a question of how your program is organized. In the scenario you've described, the menu item's behavior will be defined in terms of the button's:
Any of those three implementations will work, but why should the menu item be so dependent on the button? What's so special about the button that it should define the menu item? If a new UI design did away with buttons, what would happen to the menu? A better way is to factor out the event handler's actions so it's independent of the controls it's attached to. There are a few ways to do that:
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Beacause you should separate internal logic to some other function and call this function
This is more elegant solution and much easier to maintain. |
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It is neater obviously. But ease of use and productivity is of course also always important. In Delphi I generally refrain from it in serious apps, but I call eventhandlers in small stuff. If small stuff somehow morphes into something bigger, I clean it up, and usually at the same increase logic-UI separation. I do know though that it won't matter in Lazarus/Delphi. Other languages might have more special behaviour attached to eventhandlers. |
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Separation of concerns. A private event for a class should be encapsulated within that class and not called from external classes. This makes your project easier to change down the road if you have strong interfaces between objects and minimize the occurences of multiple entry points. |
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Suppose at some point you decide that the menu item no longer makes sense, and you want to get rid of the menu item. If you just have one other control pointing to the menu item's event handler, that might not be a big problem, you can just copy the code into the button's event handler. But if you have several different ways the code can be invoked, you'll have to do a lot of changing. Personally I like the way Qt handles this. There is a QAction class with it's own event handler that can be hooked, and then the QAction is associated with any UI elements that need to perform that task. |
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Why is it bad practice? Because it is much easier to reuse code when it is not embedded into UI controls. Why can't you do it in REALbasic? I doubt there's any technical reason; it's likely just a design decision they made. It certainly does enforce better coding practices. |
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Suppose at some time you decided that the menu should do something slightly differently. Perhaps this new change only happens under some specific circumstances. You forget about the button, but now you have changed its behaviour as well. On the other hand if you call a function, you are less likely to change what it does, since you (or the next guy) knows that this will have bad consequences. |
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This is an extension answer, as promised.
In 2000 we have started to write an application using Delphi. This was one EXE and few DLL’s containing logic. This was movie industry, so there was customers DLL, booking DLL, box office DLL and billing DLL. When user wanted to do billing, he opened appropriate form, selected customer from a list, then OnSelectItem logic loaded customers theaters to next combo box, then after selecting theater next OnSelectItem event filled third combo box with information about the movies, that has not been billed yet. Last part of the process was pushing the button “Do Invoice”. Everything was done as an event procedures. |
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Another big reason is for testability. When event handling code is buried in the UI, the only way to test this is via either manual testing or automated testing that is heavily tied to the UI. (e.g. Open menu A, Click button B). Any change in the UI naturally can then break dozens of tests. If the code is refactored into a module that deals exclusively with the job it needs to perform, then testing become a whole lot easier. |
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cooked upquite a fewspaghettiapplications, which are a total nightmare to maintain and that's a pity as the apps were quite nice. But I grew to hate my own creation. Rob's answer is really nice and exhaustive, IMO. – MasterPeter Jun 6 at 12:43