114 lines
5.7 KiB
Markdown
114 lines
5.7 KiB
Markdown
<!-- START doctoc generated TOC please keep comment here to allow auto update -->
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## Table of Contents
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- [MVCS Antipatterns](#mvcs-antipatterns)
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- [Creating entities for association tables](#creating-entities-for-association-tables)
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# MVCS Antipatterns
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In simple terms, Model-View-Controller-Services add a few more layers to the
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MVC pattern. The main one is the service, which owns all the core business
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logic and manipulate the repository layer.
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## Creating entities for association tables
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You'll often need association tables, for instance to set up a many to many
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relationships between users and their toasters. Let's assume that a toaster can
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be owned by multiple users.
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It might be tempting to create a `UserToaster` entity for this relationship,
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especially if this relationship has some complex attributes associated with
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(for instance, since when the toaster is owned by the user).
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Let me pull a few quotes from the [Domain Driven
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Design](http://www.amazon.com/Domain-Driven-Design-Tackling-Complexity-Software/dp/0321125215) by Eric Evans:
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> Design a portion of the software system to reflect the domain model in a very
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> literal way, so that mapping is obvious.
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> Object-oriented programming is powerful because it is based on a modeling
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> paradigm, and it provides implementations of the model constructs. As far as
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> the programmer is concerned, objects really exist in memory, they have
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> associations with other objects, they are organized into classes, and they
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> provide behavior available by messaging.
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> Does an object represent something with continuity and identity— something
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> that is tracked through different states or even across different
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> implementations? Or is it an attribute that describes the state of something
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> else? This is the basic distinction between an ENTITY and a VALUE OBJECT.
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> Defining objects that clearly follow one pattern or the other makes the
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> objects less ambiguous and lays out the path toward specific choices for
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> robust design.
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Evans, Eric (2003-08-22). Domain-Driven Design: Tackling Complexity in the
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Heart of Software. Pearson Education. Kindle Edition.
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Entities should model business processes, not persistence details
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([source](http://blog.sapiensworks.com/post/2013/05/13/7-Biggest-Pitfalls-When-Doing-Domain-Driven-Design.aspx/)).
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- In that case, `UserToaster` does not map to anything the business is using.
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Using plain English, somebody might ask about "what toasters does user
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A owns?" or "who owns toaster B and since when?" Nobody would ask "give me
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the UserToaster for user A".
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- The association table can be considered an implementation detail that should
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not (in most cases) leak in the domain layer. All the code should be dealing
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with the simpler logic of "user having toasters", not UserToaster objects
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being an association between a user and a toaster. This makes the code more
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intuitive and natural.
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- It will be easier to handle serializing a "user having toasters" than
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serializing UserToaster association.
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- This will make it very easy to force the calling site to take care of some
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business logic. For instance, you might be able to get all `UserToaster`, and
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then filter on whether they were bought. You might be tempted to do that by
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going through the `UserToaster` object and filtering those that have
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`were_bought` to be True. At some point, you might be doing the same thing in
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multiple places, which will decrease maintainability. If you were hiding that
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logic in the repository, you wouldn't have that issue `find_bought_toasters`.
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So in that case, I would recommend doing the following:
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- Create a `User` and `Toaster` entity.
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- Put the association properties on the entity that makes sense, for instance
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`owned_since` would be on `Toaster`, even though in the database it's stored
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on the association table.
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- If filtering on association properties is required, put this logic in
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repositories. In plain English, you would for instance ask "give all the
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toasters user A owned in December?", you wouldn't ask "give be all the
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UserToaster for owned by user A in December".
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Note that Domain Driver Design recommends avoiding many-to-many relationships
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altogether:
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> In real life, there are lots of many-to-many associations, and a great number
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> are naturally bidirectional. The same tends to be true of early forms of
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> a model as we brainstorm and explore the domain. But these general
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> associations complicate implementation and maintenance. Furthermore, they
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> communicate very little about the nature of the relationship.
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> There are at least three ways of making associations more tractable.
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> 1. Imposing a traversal direction
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> 2. Adding a qualifier, effectively reducing multiplicity
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> 3. Eliminating nonessential associations
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Evans, Eric (2003-08-22). Domain-Driven Design: Tackling Complexity in the
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Heart of Software (Kindle Locations 1642-1647). Pearson Education. Kindle
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Edition.
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Imposing a traversal direction is probably the best solution. In our example,
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it's not immediately evident which direction is the right one (a toaster being
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owned by a user, or a user owning a toasters), because that depends on what
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this application is doing. If we're working on an app that lets a connected
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user see their toasters, then we would force the relationship to be
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unidirectional user->toasters.
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Sources:
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- [7 Biggest Pitfalls When Doing Domain Driven
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Design](http://blog.sapiensworks.com/post/2013/05/13/7-Biggest-Pitfalls-When-Doing-Domain-Driven-Design.aspx/)
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- [Domain-Driven Design: Tackling Complexity in the Heart of
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Software](http://www.amazon.com/Domain-Driven-Design-Tackling-Complexity-Software/dp/0321125215)
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