Spread ASP.NET 16
Spread for ASP.NET 16 Product Documentation / Developer's Guide / Using Sheet Models / Understanding the Models / Understanding How the Models Work
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    Understanding How the Models Work
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    To understand how models work, think of the sheet (SheetView object) as a composite of the five underlying models:

    Sheet Model Classes and Interface Description
    Axis model

    BaseSheetAxisModel

    DefaultSheetAxisModel

    ISheetAxisModel

    Basis for how the sheet’s rows and columns are structured. For more information, see Understanding the Axis Model.
    Data model

    BaseSheetDataModel

    DefaultSheetDataModel

    ISheetDataModel

    Basis for the data in the cells in the sheet. For more information, see Understanding the Data Model.
    Selection model

    BaseSheetSelectionModel

    DefaultSheetSelectionModel

    ISheetSelectionModel

    Basis for the behavior of and interaction of selected cells in the sheet. For more information, see Understanding the Selection Model.
    Span model

    BaseSheetSpanModel

    DefaultSheetSpanModel

    ISheetSpanModel

    Basis for how cells in the sheet are spanned. For more information, see Understanding the Span Model.
    Style model

    BaseSheetStyleModel

    DefaultSheetStyleModel

    ISheetStyleModel

    Basis for the appearance of the cells in the sheet. For more information, see Understanding the Style Model.

    Everything you do to the model is automatically updated in the sheet and most of the aspects of the sheet that you can modify are updated in the model. This is also true for Cell, Row, and Column object settings. Most of the aspects changed with these objects automatically change the setting in the corresponding sheet model and vice versa; for example, if you add columns to the data model, then they are added to the sheet. This is true even for the parameters; for example, the row and column arguments in the GetValue and SetValue methods for the data model are the same indexes as that of the rows and columns in the sheet as long as the sheet is not sorted.

    As shown in the figure in Using Sheet Models, the component is considered to have four quadrants. The data area of the spreadsheet is considered one sheet with its own set of models, and the row headers, column headers, and corner are considered as separate sheets, each with their own models.

    Not everything in the Spread namespace is in the models. For example, there are aspects of the overall component, such as the sheet tabs, the sheet background color, and the grid lines, that are not in the models. But the relevant information about a given cell, both about the data in the cells and about the appearance of the cells, is in the models.