Exploring MVC Architecture and Applying It to My Natours Project

Introduction to MVC Architecture
Today, I delved deeper into the Model-View-Controller (MVC) pattern, a fundamental design structure for organizing code in web applications. The core purpose of MVC is to separate the app’s components into three main ar…


This content originally appeared on DEV Community and was authored by Josh Endemann

Introduction to MVC Architecture
Today, I delved deeper into the Model-View-Controller (MVC) pattern, a fundamental design structure for organizing code in web applications. The core purpose of MVC is to separate the app’s components into three main areas, ensuring that each part has a single, focused responsibility. By understanding and implementing MVC, I’m not only making my project more manageable but also laying the foundation for future scalability.

Breaking Down MVC

  1. Request Initiation:
    Every interaction starts with a client request to the server, triggering the MVC process.

  2. Router:
    The router intercepts this incoming request and directs it to the correct controller based on the defined route and request type.

  3. Controller:
    Acting as a central coordinator, the controller processes the business logic and works with models to retrieve or modify data when necessary.

  4. Model:
    Models handle direct interactions with the database, taking care of any resource access or updates required.

  5. View:
    Once data is prepared by the controller, it is passed to the view layer. The view converts this data into a user-friendly format that the client will receive.

  6. Response:
    The view is sent back to the client as the final response, completing the cycle.

In essence, this cycle demonstrates the MVC flow, promoting a clean separation of responsibilities and making data handling more efficient.

Separating Application Logic and Business Logic
When organizing code with MVC, it’s crucial to differentiate between Application Logic and Business Logic, as they have distinct roles.

Application Logic:
Purpose: Handles the structural and technical aspects of the app, focusing on how the app functions without addressing the specific business problem it aims to solve.
Responsibilities:
Managing requests and responses.
Acting as an intermediary between models and views.
Maintaining the app’s technical workflow and structure.
Business Logic:
Purpose: Directly addresses the specific business problems the application is built to solve, enforcing business rules and workflows.
Responsibilities:
Ensuring that business needs are accurately represented in the app.
Enforcing business rules, such as:
Validating user inputs.
Creating new resources, like tours, in the database.
Managing permissions for actions (e.g., allowing only users who’ve purchased a tour to leave reviews).
Although there may be overlap, keeping application and business logic distinct is a powerful way to maintain a clean codebase.

Refactoring My Natours Project with MVC
In the Natours project, I began implementing MVC architecture by moving the tour schema and model into a separate tourModel.js file and assigning controller functions to manage business logic. This setup bridges the model and view layers with dedicated controller functions, organizing the project in a way that will make it much easier to expand and adapt in the future.

Refactoring for MVC has already made the project more organized and scalable. This approach sets a solid foundation for handling future features, integrations, or even scaling the application without creating excessive complexity.

Final Thoughts
Revisiting MVC today has been a real eye-opener. Breaking down each layer has shown me just how crucial separating responsibilities is for keeping projects scalable and maintainable. This clarity in MVC is already helping me build out Natours with a more organized, adaptable structure—one that’ll be much easier to grow over time.


This content originally appeared on DEV Community and was authored by Josh Endemann


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