This is a very wide-ranging/vague question, but here goes. Apologies in advance.
The app (desktop app) I'm building takes different kinds of input to generate a QR code (I'm just building it to learn some Obj-C/Cocoa). The user can switch between different views that allow input of plain text (single text field), VCard/MeCard data (multiple text fields), and other stuff. No matter the input, the result is a QR code.
To keep things contained, I'd like to use the views as view-controllers, so they handle they're own inputs, and can simply "send" a generic "data to encode" object containing all the data to a central encoder. I.e. the plain text view would make a data object with its textfield's text, while the VCard/MeCard view would use all of its fields to make structured VCard/MeCard data.
I can bind all of this stuff together manually in code, but I'd really like to learn how bindings/KVO could help me out. Alas, after reading Apple's developer docs, and the simpler tutorials/examples I could find, I'm still not sure how to apply it to my app.
For instance: The user edits the textfields in the VCard-view. The VCard view-controller is notified of each update and "recalculates" the data object. The central encoder controller is then notified of the updated data object, and encodes the data.
The point of all this, is that the input views can be created completely independently, and can contain all kinds of input fields. They then handle their own inputs, and "return" a generic data object, which the encoder can use. Internally, the views observe their inputs to update the data object, and externally the encoder needs only observe the data object.
Trouble is I have no idea how to make this all happen and keep it decoupled. Should there be an object controller between the input-view and its fields? Should there be another one between the view and the encoder? What do I need where? If anyone has a link to a good tutorial, please share.
Again, I can roll my own system of notifications and glue code, but I think the point is to avoid that.