CSC/ECE 517 Fall 2013/ch1 1w27 ma: Difference between revisions
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MVC dictates that the system be split into three distinct parts, a Model, View and Controller | MVC dictates that the system be split into three distinct parts, a Model, View and Controller | ||
=== Model === | |||
The Model generally contains the data for the application and is usually linked to a database back-end. | The Model generally contains the data for the application and is usually linked to a database back-end. | ||
It contains the application state and also most of the business logic. The model has no knowledge of the user interfaces. | It contains the application state and also most of the business logic. The model has no knowledge of the user interfaces. | ||
=== View === | |||
The view refers to the interface that is presented to the end-user. The view does not do any processing, but simply acts as the presentation layer, displaying the application data. | The view refers to the interface that is presented to the end-user. The view does not do any processing, but simply acts as the presentation layer, displaying the application data. | ||
=== Controller === | |||
The controller receives events from the outside world [ or through some view] and performs some processing | The controller receives events from the outside world [ or through some view] and performs some processing | ||
It interacts with the model and redirects to the appropriate view. | It interacts with the model and redirects to the appropriate view. |
Revision as of 01:40, 16 September 2013
MVC architecture structure in Ruby on Rails
What is MVC
MVC is a design pattern and was developed in 1979 by Trygve Reenskaug (Smalltalk).
MVC dictates that the system be split into three distinct parts, a Model, View and Controller
Model
The Model generally contains the data for the application and is usually linked to a database back-end. It contains the application state and also most of the business logic. The model has no knowledge of the user interfaces.
View
The view refers to the interface that is presented to the end-user. The view does not do any processing, but simply acts as the presentation layer, displaying the application data.
Controller
The controller receives events from the outside world [ or through some view] and performs some processing It interacts with the model and redirects to the appropriate view.