Re: Question about model observers
Re: Question about model observers
- Subject: Re: Question about model observers
- From: Keary Suska <email@hidden>
- Date: Tue, 11 May 2010 08:43:46 -0600
On May 11, 2010, at 8:10 AM, Eric Giguere wrote:
> Everybody tends to point in using the KVO notifications instead of the custom accessors, even if those are generated. Ok, but I couldn't make it work. Using controllers, no problem but what if I want my parent entity to be its own observer? After all, I am talking here about a relationship where children are "owned" by its parent. The behaviour on my parent when child list is modifies shouldn't require to go out of the model and use controllers. So I tried creating an observer this way, of course, didn't work:
>
> [self addObserver:self forKeyPath:@"needIngredients" options:NSKeyValueObservingOptionNew | NSKeyValueObservingOptionOld context:NULL];
>
> Up there, the needIngredients is my many relationship property.
>
> I Apple's documentation, I also read about setting the parent as a listener to an attribute of each child in the list! Does not make sense at all. And anyway, if the first place if you want to add / remove self as observer in each of your children, you must supply custom accessor methods to make that association don't we? That kinds of go back to square 1 and define custom accessor methods.
>
> So the real question here:
> What is the "right" method to have those add / remove notification in the model? Custom accessors, KVO?
> If KVO should be the way, then what would be the right approach using only model entities to have this working? The controller layer should never be involved in that kind of logic.
Just in case it isn't clear, you can not observe changes to the contents of any collection. To use KVO effectively, you need to know why this is the case, although it is outside the scope of my current response.
Now that that is out of the way, I would say that the only sensible approach (AFAIK) is to implement custom accessors.
Keary Suska
Esoteritech, Inc.
"Demystifying technology for your home or business"
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