I have a web solution (in VS2010) with two sub-projects:
Domain
which holds theModel
classes (mapped to database tables via Entity Framework) andServices
which (besides other stuff) are responsible for CRUD operationsWebUI
which references the Domain project
For the first pages I've created I have used the Model classes from the Domain project directly as Model in my strongly typed Views because the classes were small and I wanted to display and modify all properties.
Now I have a page which should only work with a small part of all properties of the corresponding Domain Model. I retrieve those properties by using a projection of the query result in my Service class. But I need to project into a type - and here come my questions about the solutions I can think of:
I introduce
ViewModels
which live in theWebUI
project and exposeIQueryables
and theEF data context
from the service to the WebUI project. Then I could directly project into those ViewModels.If I don't want to expose IQueryables and the EF data context I put the
ViewModel
classes in theDomain
project, then I can return the ViewModels directly as result of the queries and projections from the Service classes.In addition to the
ViewModels
in theWebUI
project I introduceData transfer objects
which move the data from the queries in the Service classes to theViewModels
.
Solution 1 and 2 look like the same amount of work and I am inclined to prefer solution 2 to keep all the database concerns in a separate project. But somehow it sounds wrong to have View-Models in the Domain project.
Solution 3 sounds like a lot more work since I have more classes to create and to care about the Model-DTO-ViewModel mapping. I also don't understand what would be the difference between the DTOs and the ViewModels. Aren't the ViewModels exactly the collection of the selected properties of my Model class which I want to display? Wouldn't they contain the same members as the DTOs? Why would I want to differentiate between ViewModels and DTO?
Which of these three solutions is preferable and what are the benefits and downsides? Are there other options?
Thank you for feedback in advance!
Edit (because I had perhaps a too long wall of text and have been asked for code)
Example: I have a Customer
Entity ...
public class Customer
{
public int ID { get; set; }
public string Name { get; set; }
public City { get; set; }
// ... and many more properties
}
... and want to create a View which only shows (and perhaps allows to edit) the Name
of customers in a list. In a Service class I extract the data I need for the View via a projection:
public class CustomerService
{
public List<SomeClass1> GetCustomerNameList()
{
using (var dbContext = new MyDbContext())
{
return dbContext.Customers
.Select(c => new SomeClass1
{
ID = c.ID,
Name = c.Name
})
.ToList();
}
}
}
Then there is a CustomerController with an action method. How should this look like?
Either this way (a) ...
public ActionResult Index()
{
List<SomeClass1> list = _service.GetCustomerNameList();
return View(list);
}
... or better this way (b):
public ActionResult Index()
{
List<SomeClass1> list = _service.GetCustomerNameList();
List<SomeClass2> newList = CreateNewList(list);
return View(newList);
}
With respect to option 3 above I'd say: SomeClass1
(lives in Domain
project) is a DTO and SomeClass2
(lives in WebUI
project) is a ViewModel.
I am wondering if it ever makes sense to distinguish the two classes. Why wouldn't I always choose option (a) for the controller action (because it's easier)? Are there reasons to introduce the ViewModel (SomeClass2
) in addition to the DTO (SomeClass1
)?