My generic question is as the title states, is it best to load data during ViewModel construction or afterward through some Loaded event handling?
I'm guessing the answer is after construction via some Loaded event handling, but I'm wondering how that is most cleanly coordinated between ViewModel and View?
Here's more details about my situation and the particular problem I'm trying to solve:
I am using the MVVM Light framework as well as Unity for DI. I have some nested Views, each bound to a corresponding ViewModel. The ViewModels are bound to each View's root control DataContext via the ViewModelLocator idea that Laurent Bugnion has put into MVVM Light. This allows for finding ViewModels via a static resource and for controlling the lifetime of ViewModels via a Dependency Injection framework, in this case Unity. It also allows for Expression Blend to see everything in regard to ViewModels and how to bind them.
So anyway, I've got a parent View that has a ComboBox databound to an ObservableCollection in its ViewModel. The ComboBox's SelectedItem is also bound (two-way) to a property on the ViewModel. When the selection of the ComboBox changes, this is to trigger updates in other views and subviews. Currently I am accomplishing this via the Messaging system that is found in MVVM Light. This is all working great and as expected when you choose different items in the ComboBox.
However, the ViewModel is getting its data during construction time via a series of initializing method calls. This seems to only be a problem if I want to control what the initial SelectedItem of the ComboBox is. Using MVVM Light's messaging system, I currently have it set up where the setter of the ViewModel's SelectedItem property is the one broadcasting the update and the other interested ViewModels register for the message in their constructors. It appears I am currently trying to set the SelectedItem via the ViewModel at construction time, which hasn't allowed sub-ViewModels to be constructed and register yet.
What would be the cleanest way to coordinate the data load and initial setting of SelectedItem within the ViewModel? I really want to stick with putting as little in the View's code-behind as is reasonable. I think I just need a way for the ViewModel to know when stuff has Loaded and that it can then continue to load the data and finalize the setup phase.
Thanks in advance for your responses.
At present, this means that every ViewModel must have a public constructor which has either no parameters or which has only string parameters. So the reason your ViewModel isn't loading is because the MvxDefaultViewModelLocator can't find a suitable constructor for your ViewModel.
Anything that is important to the logical behavior of the application should go into the view model. Code to retrieve or manipulate data items that are to be displayed in the view through data binding should reside in the view model.
In general, I believe most developers agree that a view should have exactly one viewmodel. There is no need to attach multiple viewmodels to a single view.
ViewModel as the bridge between the View and the Model. TL;DR: We can pass parameters to our ViewModel, use it as a data holder, also to share data between Fragments, and to persist its state across process recreation. This is part of a multi-part series regarding Advanced ViewModels on Android.
For events you should use the EventToCommand in MVVM Light Toolkit. Using this you can bind any event of any ui element to relaycommand. Check out his article on EventToCommand at
http://blog.galasoft.ch/archive/2009/11/05/mvvm-light-toolkit-v3-alpha-2-eventtocommand-behavior.aspx
Download the sample and have a look. Its great. You won't need any codebehind then. An example is as follows:
<Page x:Class="cubic.cats.Wpf.Views.SplashScreenView" xmlns="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml/presentation" xmlns:x="http://schemas.microsoft.com/winfx/2006/xaml" xmlns:mc="http://schemas.openxmlformats.org/markup-compatibility/2006" xmlns:d="http://schemas.microsoft.com/expression/blend/2008" xmlns:i="clr-namespace:System.Windows.Interactivity;assembly=System.Windows.Interactivity" xmlns:cmd="clr-namespace:GalaSoft.MvvmLight.Command;assembly=GalaSoft.MvvmLight.Extras" mc:Ignorable="d" d:DesignHeight="300" d:DesignWidth="300" Title="SplashScreenPage"> <i:Interaction.Triggers> <i:EventTrigger EventName="Loaded"> <cmd:EventToCommand Command="{Binding LoadedCommand}" /> </i:EventTrigger> </i:Interaction.Triggers> <Grid> <Label Content="This is test page" /> </Grid> </Page>
and the view mode could be like this
public class SplashScreenViewModel : ViewModelBase { public RelayCommand LoadedCommand { get; private set; } /// <summary> /// Initializes a new instance of the SplashScreenViewModel class. /// </summary> public SplashScreenViewModel() { LoadedCommand = new RelayCommand(() => { string a = "put a break point here to see that it gets called after the view as been loaded"; }); } }
if you would like the view model to have the EventArgs, you can simple set PassEventArgsToCommand to true:
<i:Interaction.Triggers> <i:EventTrigger EventName="Loaded"> <cmd:EventToCommand PassEventArgsToCommand="True" Command="{Binding LoadedCommand}" /> </i:EventTrigger> </i:Interaction.Triggers>
and the view model will be like
public class SplashScreenViewModel : ViewModelBase { public RelayCommand<MouseEventArgs> LoadedCommand { get; private set; } /// <summary> /// Initializes a new instance of the SplashScreenViewModel class. /// </summary> public SplashScreenViewModel() { LoadedCommand = new RelayCommand<MouseEventArgs>(e => { var a = e.WhateverParameters....; }); } }
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