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MVVM pattern in WPF has a strong emphasis on completely separating the ViewModel from the UI, and ideally has nothing or very little in the code-behind file. This allows to re-use the ViewModel for different types of interface.

MVVM pattern in Razor Pages has the code-behind as the ViewModel and is tightly coupled with the web logic with OnGet and OnPost methods.

Thus, the carefully-crafted decoupled WPF ViewModel cannot serve as the Web ViewModel (or perhaps can be used from the web page Model?)

Is there something I'm missing, and why is there such a difference between MVVM in WPF (decoupled) and MVVM in Razor Pages (coupled)?

If we were to apply the Razor Pages approach to WPF, then the code-behind would become the ViewModel -- which I've never seen anyone recommend.

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    As far as I know, MVVM is about decoupling Models from Views, not ViewModels from Views :\
    – vasily.sib
    Mar 11, 2019 at 11:54

2 Answers 2

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To make things clear: WPF introduces a coupling between the view and the view model the same way Razor Pages does. The view model is a data representation layer in order to break the dependency between the view and the model. So the view can be changed without modifying any models. The view model itself is then coupled to the model since it fetches the required data (e.g. from a service or data base). This behavior is realized in Razor Pages in a unified pattern by having the view models implement the abstract PageModel and by following a convention by providing the appropriate optional action handlers (e.g. OnGet()). Those handlers will be invoked by the framework anytime a HTTP request was issued for the page. You would fetch or manipulate model data based on the request method (e.g. GET, DELETE, POST, PUT, ...) and then present it to the view. The convention describes the naming pattern of those handlers so that the framework can identify them.

So you'll find the same degree of coupling between the layers in WPF MVVM and Razor Pages MVVM. Since the view model in RazorPages encapsulates the context of a specific page the source file naming follows a naming convention ("page name.cshtml.cs") to make the relationship visible in your filesystem. It's not a code-behind file like the partial class file of a view in WPF.

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  • The view model is a data representation layer in order to break the dependency between the view and the model Not exactly true, you describe MVC. MVVM is to split VIew from presentation logic and to support two-way binding w/o spaghetti code from Windows Forms times (txtName.Text to read or set value). It was specifically introduced (and invented) by Microsoft for WPF. In WinForms you had a lot of code in the code-behind which was related to formatting values and retrieving/updating UI elements. MVVM was invented to solve that.In ASP.NET Core VM is just reduced to a DTO Class w/o any logic
    – Tseng
    Mar 11, 2019 at 14:02
  • Presentation logic in WPF/MVVM usually involves stuff like, updating other controls contents (solved via data binding and INotifyPropertyChanged), updating the state of text fields (active/inactive, buttons, handled via ICommand and CanExecute) or coordinating user input with background services (commands calling services to fetch or submit data - done by controllers in MVC). Most of that stuff isn't applicable to server-sided web applications (but can be applied to client-sided web applications). Goal of MVVM is to reuse that when UI changes or is reworked
    – Tseng
    Mar 11, 2019 at 14:08
  • MVVM is a form of MVP which is a form of MVC. I said DATA representation layer to emphasize that it's an intermediate layer to the model data itself. The main goal of MVVM (same goal as MVP, MVC) is to decouple view from model or business logic. Data binding is just the mechanism to realize this. It's a variation of MVP that uses binding to make the dependency between Presenter (or Controler) and View unidirectional.
    – BionicCode
    Mar 11, 2019 at 14:11
  • Nope, DataBinding was the main reason why MVVM was introduced. There was no MVVM before WPF existed. It was specifically designed for WPFs data-binding features. Later the pattern was adopted to other frameworks, but it's originally designed for WPF and its data-bindings. It was invented/defined/described by Ken Cooper and Ted Peters, two Microsoft Engineers: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Model–view–viewmodel#Rationale
    – Tseng
    Mar 11, 2019 at 14:21
  • I never said that MVVM existed before WPF. I just said it evolved from MVP. MVP like MVC have an dependency arrow pointing towards the view (in the dependency graph or the UML model). By introducing a binding mechanism, they managed to remove this arrow. The presenter became more decoupled from the view. In MVVM all dependency arrows are pointing into the same direction now and away from the view.
    – BionicCode
    Mar 11, 2019 at 14:28
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I'm not sure why you insist on using Razor Pages, when there is MVC (Model-View-Controller).

You should use the MVC pattern instead. You get the same razor syntax but decoupled.

Razor Pages were introduced as a form of successor to WebForms (which itself tried to mimic Windows Forms, which isn't about decoupling neither).

If we go a few years back in history, MVVM was to use the full power of WPF's Two-Way Model binding, which acts as a separate layer between the UI and Application layer where one can put presentation logic in (logic tightly coupled to the Presentation, which is an UI concern rather than application layer which is decoupled from the UI).

For that reasons the MVVM's ViewModels also have (additionally to properties for Model Binding), things like Commands and may be Navigation aware (i.e. via Prism's INavigationAware interfaces).

In this context, ViewModels aren't of much value in server-sided web applications, because HTTP by itself, is stateless where ViewModels maintain a state.

Thus the ViewModels in MVC are simply reduced to DTOs (Data Transfer Objects), which has basic validation (through validation attributes). ViewModels in MVC Applications don't have any presentation logic, due to the fact its rendered into HTML and most presentation Logic happens outside via JavaScript (what happens when a button is clicked, how to format a date or currency for a user).

That being said, you don't really need full-fleged ViewModels in an ASP.NET Core application, at least not for the server-sided part. However, if you are using a client-sided technology (Angular, Vue.js, React) you may utilize ViewModels to enhance the functionality and decouple it from the View.

In fact, angular components are pretty much ViewModels and fulfill the same task as ViewModels in MVVM pattern do (one can inject services into it, has 1-way or 2-way bindings, input validation and one puts presentation logic in them).

TL;DR: You don't really need ViewModels as they are defined in MVVM, just DTO-like classes to make consuming them in the (Razor)View Template easier. And don't use Razor Pages for decoupling.

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  • When I add @model MyModel to my view, doesn't that "couple" my view and model? Absolutely no difference between Razor Pages and MVC at that point. It's just expressed differently.
    – mxmissile
    Mar 11, 2019 at 13:47
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    "Model" in MVC/MVVM is more than "DTO class". M-V-VM/M-V-C are layers, not concrete classes. For example, NavigationService is part of the View, even though its written in code. Its not like "View = XAML nothing else". Model in in the sense of MVC is "every thing that is not View or Controller", which includes also all your services. It depends though what you bind with @model MyModel. Binding your EF Entities? Thats the wrong way to go. Biding your DTOs/ViewModels? Then you're good
    – Tseng
    Mar 11, 2019 at 13:50
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    I've been reading a lot about MVC vs Razor pages, and most people were recommending Razor pages unless it's a web API or a single-page application. They say MVC controller classes grow like a virus and the code is spread into all kinds of places -- and in that sense Razor pages has cleaner separation of concerns. Even Microsoft is recommending Razor pages for websites based on page navigation. Mar 11, 2019 at 15:21
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    @EtienneCharland The goal of MVVM, MVP or MVC patterns is not to reuse the controller or the view model but the business logic of your application. You don't want to modify your model evrytime you modify or replace your view. It also makes automated UI testing possible which also is a huge gain. When the view is coupled to the model the view can't be tested without it. Assuming that your model consists of services and data bases this can be a huge impact.
    – BionicCode
    Mar 11, 2019 at 15:34
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    @EtienneCharland If you don't need testability or your application is small or UI will never change (e.g. design or new navigation paths or structure) you can fairly develop without those patterns. Your evaluation and your personal decision. The view model just makes it possible that the view doesn't have to directly access the model. It breaks the dependency. between those two. While at the same time the model doesn't have to care about the presentation of the data.
    – BionicCode
    Mar 11, 2019 at 15:34

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