I’m currently in the process of converting some small personal web sites from WebForms to MVC. With the existing sites, the database schema is solid but I had never really taken the time to build proper data/business models/layers. The aspx pages all talked to the database directly using a variety of Views and Stored Procedures that were created as needed for convenience. With MVC, I’m now trying to ‘do it right’ as they say and use things like LINQ to SQL and/or the Entity Framework to build a proper data model or models for the application.
My question revolves around what goals I should have for building data models. I’ve read various pattern related articles and I realize that ultimately the answer is likely going to depend on the characteristics of my data. But generally should I attempt to build bigger models that encompass as much of the database as possible so that there’s only one way to interact with a given set of tables? Or should I build smaller custom models for each MVC View that only contain the data and access that View will need?
This would probably be better.
Do not forget, you can stick your models in hierarchies, so common properties, like ids, names, preferences can be present in each model.
Fat expanded models could be better for enterprise application, where framework automatically does lot of stuff based on preloaded user preferences, user roles, access rights etc. For a small personal project would probably be better to try to keep your models small and clean. It is also a protection. By not putting unnecessary data into a model you ensure your view will not by mistake display wrong entries or submitting a form would not by mistake overwrite some other data.