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I have the following scenario which I need to implement following the CQRS pattern:

  1. a user logs in
  2. the user enters some insurance details
  3. the user ask for a decision to be applied
  4. the user views the result of the decision

This seems fairly straightforward, however my problem is between step 3 and 4, on step 3 I send a ApplyForDecision command which will get a decision from a underwriting service, an event with the result of that decision is then sent to the BUS for the read store to later consume it and update the view tables with the decision result.

The problem is on the UI, how do I let the user know that the decision is being applied, since in CQRS the read model is not updated 'straightaway' how do I make the UI show that a decision is in progress and will 'soon' arrive?

I also need to give the user the ability to log out and log back in, since the decision may not have been applied yet, how do I make the UI show the 'pending decision screen'?

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  • Is the UI the web client or a smart client?
    – stung
    Commented Aug 18, 2010 at 21:29
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    Is state changed in any way? I mean, is this decision application some form of computation that needs to be confirmed? If so, is this visible to the "others" in the system? How is this scenario highly collaborative? Commented Dec 10, 2010 at 20:17

2 Answers 2

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The answer is to immediately raise an event indicating the decision has been applied for, update the read DB and redirect straight away to your pending decision screen whether or not the read DB has been updated by that time. Static text 'Pending decision you will be contacted' or something along those lines. They can refresh or come back later and more than likely will get the real data. Then when the decision has been decided, you have a DecisionMade event and update the read DB, send emails out, whatever the case, accordingly.

That's the trade off with eventual consistency you have to deal with in CQRS. Often when I've made changes to domain object properties on a form, I fake it in the immediate feedback the user gets while the back end does its chores. Yes, a little ugly but the users don't know that.

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    Good answer, especially about the user not knowing. That's the key, make sure the user doesn't notice. For example you might store inside the browser or server cache that the item was updated. When you access the readmodel for data and in your cache you notice that the data hasn't been updated yet, you do so yourself, but only for this user. SignalR is also great for updating other clients as fast as possible. Commented Aug 4, 2013 at 7:30
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IMHO the solution would be to let your command emit an "ApplyForDecisionRequested" and an "ApplyForDecisionHandled" event, and update your read model accordingly.

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