I am working through Aaron Hillegass’ Cocoa Programming for Mac OS X and am doing the challenge for Chapter 18. Basically, the challenge is to write an app that can draw ovals using your mouse, and then additionally, add saving/loading and undo support. I’m trying to think of a good class design for this app that follows MVC. Here’s what I had in mind:
Have a NSView-subclass that represents an oval (say JBOval) that I can use to easily draw an oval.
Have a main view (JBDrawingView) that holds JBOvals and draws them.
The thing is that I wasn’t sure how to add archiving. Should I archive each JBOval? I think this would work, but archiving an NSView doesn’t seem very efficient. Any ideas on a better class design?
Thanks.
That doesn’t sound very MVC. “JBOval” sounds like a model class to me.
I do like this part.
My suggestion is to have each model object (JBOval, etc.) able to create a Bézier path representing itself. The JBDrawingView (and you should come up with a better name for that, as all views draw by definition) should ask each model object for its Bézier path, fill settings, and stroke settings, and draw the object accordingly.
This keeps the knowledge of how to draw (the path, line width, colors, etc.) in the various shape classes where they belong, while also keeping the actual drawing code in the view layer where it belongs.
The answer to where to put archiving code should be intuitively obvious from this point.