I'm trying to structure my WPF MVVM application according to best practises. I have to start with a lot of existing code so don't have the option of resolving all structural flaws straight away. I like the following solution structure.
This separates the solution into the following projects; BusinessLogic, BusinessObjects, Infrastructure (Common reusable utilities), WPF Shell and Modules (application components to be injected using an IOC container).
I understand that the business object represents the human world entity whereas the business logic is the implementation details as discussed in this question.
What are Business Objects and what is Business Logic?
Therefore using MVVM does the business object just become a dumb container that doesn't actually do anything other than wait to have its properties changed by external business logic? I don't see how you decouple the business object from the business logic to the point of being able to have them in separate assemblies.
Take the following hugely simplified code:
public class Chart
{
private SizeChart _activeChartSize = new SizeChart();
public void Draw() {
// Size the chart object
_activeChartSize.Size(this);
// Do other draw related things
}
}
public class SizeChart
{
public void Size(Chart chartToSize) {
// Manipulate the chart object size
}
}
In the context of the MVVM solution structure described above (to my mind at least) the SizeChart class would be business logic and the Chart class would be a business object but placing them in different projects would be a circular dependency. Is the SizeChart class business logic or a business object and where in the solution structure should the SizeChart class reside if I adopt this proposed MVVM solution structure?
Apologies if this is an incredibly obvious and simple question to some people but it's difficult when you can't start with a clean slate to know how to best start transitioning poorly structured code to well structured code.