I'm trying to render two instances of an ItemView into different regions. When I do this, only one region appears with the working javascript. Both instances have their html elements.
I have two files that are both Layouts. One calls
var monthView = new CalendarView({ parentDivName: "full_screen" });
App.mainRegion.show(monthView);
The other calls:
var monthView2 = new CalendarView({ parentDivName: "full_screen22" });
App.datePickerRegion.show(monthView2);
Does anyone have a fiddle they can share where two instances of an ItemView are rendered on the same page where the javascript within the ItemView can be visible? Or, am I going about this all wrong? Is there a better way to create multiple instances of the same ItemView?
I imagine the problem lies elsewhere in your code as this is both valid code and a valid approach to rendering multiple instances of an ItemView. Without more code, it will be hard to figure out what exactly is the problem. One thing to check is that the layout has been rendered before trying to render something in one of its regions. Here's a simple jsfiddle that demos what I think you're going for: http://jsfiddle.net/craigjennings11/jxu9j/
var Layout = Backbone.Marionette.Layout.extend({
el: '.layout',
template: _.template('<div class="view1"></div><div class="view2"></div>'),
regions: {
view1: '.view1',
view2: '.view2'
}
});
Is there a handy way to throw/catch (custom) events from/to multiple levels of child/parent views in Backbone?
Let me explain my situation. I'm catching "keydown" events and check if some interactions should been done on the parent level. If not, then I'm calling the childView function for that. My BaseView looks something like this:
var BaseView = Backbone.View.extend({
keydown: function(e){
return this;
},
});
It works fine until I'm not trying to throw other customEvents to interact with childViews of childViews. Which by the way, don't know about the existence of themselves.
I can't just simple do something like the stuff below, cause my parent don't even know all childViews of the subView. I'm trying to do something like this:
eg. Blur the subChildViews input
Parent.subview.subsubview.trigger('blurInput');
I'm really sure I'm on the wrong way with my event-pushing-"keydown"-method,
could someone point me the right direction?
EDIT:
The raw BackboneJS isn't really build for something like that, but there is a Module out there. MarionetteJS was my solution, it provides everything I was looking for. Subviews, modular logic and an optimized cross view event system.
There is an awesome getting started tutorial on smashingmagazine.com
Well there's no handy solution in backbone form scratch, cause nesting views is not handeled there is any way.
What i can advise you is to set the parental relation(so each view knows it's parent) rather then parent knows all of it's subviews, and as long as view is an event emitter by default toy can do something like this [pseudo-code]:
parent view:
var BaseView = Backbone.View.extend({
keydown: function(e){
this.trigger("custom.keydown");
return this;
},
});
child view:
var ChildView = Backbone.View.extend({
initialize:function(){
this.parent.on("custom.keydown",this.keydown,this);
}
});
I see many tutorials which don't follow the supposedly best practice of making a model, a view and collection for that model then a view for the collection. Which would be the parent view?
How do I make a view for a collection? Also, is it possible for it to keep track of when a model is added or deleted for it to update/re-render?
You must do something like this in your collection view:
var view = Backbone.View.extend({});
var myView = new view({'collection' : new collection});
To handle add/remove event, use this in your initialize function:
this.collection.on("add", this.onAdd, this);
this.collection.on("remove", this.onRemove, this);
and in your model view:
this.model.on("change", this.onUpdate,this);
See it here: http://www.neiker.com.ar/backbone/
(Sorry, I don't speak english)
EDIT: Just use marionette:
https://github.com/marionettejs/backbone.marionette/blob/master/docs/marionette.collectionview.md
For the last six months I've been working with Backbone. The first two months were messing around, learning and figuring out how I want to structure my code around it. The next 4 months were pounding away a production-fit application. Don't get me wrong, Backbone has saved me from the thousands-lines mess of client side code that were the standard before, but it enabled me to do more grandiose things in less time, opening up a complete new stack of problems. For all the questions I raise here there are simple solutions that feels like hacks or just feel wrong. I promise a 300 points bounty for an awesome solution. Here goes:
Loading - For our use case (an admin panel) pessimistic syncing is bad. For some things I need to validate things on the server before accepting them. We started out before the 'sync' event was merged into Backbone,
and we used this little code for mimicking the loading event:
window.old_sync = Backbone.sync
# Add a loading event to backbone.sync
Backbone.sync = (method, model, options) ->
old_sync(method, model, options)
model.trigger("loading")
Great. It works as expected but it doesn't feel correct. We bind this event to all the relevant views and display a loading icon until we receive a success or error event from that model. Is there a better, saner, way to do this?
Now for the hard ones:
Too many things render themselves too much - Let's say our application have tabs. Every tab controls a collection. On the left side you get the collection. You click a model to start editing it at the center. You change its name and press tab to get to the next form item. Now, your app is a "real time something something" that notices the difference, runs validations, and automatically sync the change to the server, no save button required! Great, but the H2 at the start of the form is the same name as in the input - you need to update it. Oh, and you need to update the name on the list to the side. OH, and the list sorts itself by names!
Here's another example: You want to create a new item in the collection. You press the "new" button and you start filling out the form. Do you immediately add the item to the collection? But what happens if you decided to discard it? Or if you save the entire collection on another tab? And, there's a file upload - You need to save and sync the model before you can start uploading the file (so you can attach the file to the model). So everything starts rendering in tremors: You save the model and the list and the form renders themselves again - it's synced now, so you get a new delete button, and it shows in the list - but now the file upload finished uploading, so everything starts rendering again.
Add subviews to the mix and everything starts looking like a Fellini movie.
It's subviews all the way down - Here's a good article about this stuff. I could not, for the love of everything that is holy, find a correct way to attach jQuery plugins or DOM events to any view that has subviews. Hell ensues promptly. Tooltips hear a render coming a long and start freaking around, subviews become zombie-like or do not respond. This is the main pain points as here actual bugs stand, but I still don't have an all encompassing solution.
Flickering - Rendering is fast. In fact, it is so fast that my screen looks like it had a seizure. Sometimes it's images that has to load again (with another server call!), so the html minimizes and then maximizes again abruptly - a css width+height for that element will fix that. sometimes we can solve this with a fadeIn and a fadeOut - which are a pain in the ass to write, since sometimes we're reusing a view and sometimes creating it anew.
TL;DR - I'm having problems with views and subviews in Backbone - It renders too many times, it flickers when it renders, subviews detach my DOM events and eat my brains.
Thank you!
More details: BackboneJS with the Ruby on Rails Gem. Templates using UnderscoreJS templates.
Partial rendering of views
In order to minimize the full rendering of your DOM hierarchy, you can set up special nodes in your DOM that will reflect updates on a given property.
Let's use this simple Underscore template, a list of names:
<ul>
<% _(children).each(function(model) { %>
<li>
<span class='model-<%= model.cid %>-name'><%= model.name %></span> :
<span class='model-<%= model.cid %>-name'><%= model.name %></span>
</li>
<% }); %>
</ul>
Notice the class model-<%= model.cid %>-name, this will be our point of injection.
We can then define a base view (or modify Backbone.View) to fill these nodes with the appropriate values when they are updated:
var V = Backbone.View.extend({
initialize: function () {
// bind all changes to the models in the collection
this.collection.on('change', this.autoupdate, this);
},
// grab the changes and fill any zone set to receive the values
autoupdate: function (model) {
var _this = this,
changes = model.changedAttributes(),
attrs = _.keys(changes);
_.each(attrs, function (attr) {
_this.$('.model-' + model.cid + '-' + attr).html(model.get(attr));
});
},
// render the complete template
// should only happen when there really is a dramatic change to the view
render: function () {
var data, html;
// build the data to render the template
// this.collection.toJSON() with the cid added, in fact
data = this.collection.map(function (model) {
return _.extend(model.toJSON(), {cid: model.cid});
});
html = template({children: data});
this.$el.html(html);
return this;
}
});
The code would vary a bit to accommodate a model instead of a collection.
A Fiddle to play with http://jsfiddle.net/nikoshr/cfcDX/
Limiting the DOM manipulations
Delegating the rendering to the subviews can be costly, their HTML fragments have to be inserted into the DOM of the parent.
Have a look at this jsperf test comparing different methods of rendering
The gist of it is that generating the complete HTML structure and then applying views is much faster than building views and subviews and then cascading the rendering. For example,
<script id="tpl-table" type="text/template">
<table>
<thead>
<tr>
<th>Row</th>
<th>Name</th>
</tr>
</thead>
<tbody>
<% _(children).each(function(model) { %>
<tr id='<%= model.cid %>'>
<td><%= model.row %></td>
<td><%= model.name %></td>
</tr>
<% }); %>
</tbody>
</table>
</script>
var ItemView = Backbone.View.extend({
});
var ListView = Backbone.View.extend({
render: function () {
var data, html, $table, template = this.options.template;
data = this.collection.map(function (model) {
return _.extend(model.toJSON(), {
cid: model.cid
});
});
html = this.options.template({
children: data
});
$table = $(html);
this.collection.each(function (model) {
var subview = new ItemView({
el: $table.find("#" + model.cid),
model: model
});
});
this.$el.empty();
this.$el.append($table);
return this;
}
});
var view = new ListView({
template: _.template($('#tpl-table').html()),
collection: new Backbone.Collection(data)
});
http://jsfiddle.net/nikoshr/UeefE/
Note that the jsperf shows that the template can be be split into subtemplates without too much penalty, which would allow you to provide a partial rendering for the rows.
On a related note, don't work on nodes attached to the DOM, this will cause unnecessary reflows. Either create a new DOM or detach the node before manipulating it.
Squashing zombies
Derick Bailey wrote an excellent article on the subject of eradicating zombie views
Basically, you have to remember that when you discard a view, you must unbind all listeners and perform any additional cleanup like destroying the jQuery plugin instances. What I use is a combination of methods similar to what Derick uses in Backbone.Marionette:
var BaseView = Backbone.View.extend({
initialize: function () {
// list of subviews
this.views = [];
},
// handle the subviews
// override to destroy jQuery plugin instances
unstage: function () {
if (!this.views) {
return;
}
var i, l = this.views.length;
for (i = 0; i < l; i = i + 1) {
this.views[i].destroy();
}
this.views = [];
},
// override to setup jQuery plugin instances
stage: function () {
},
// destroy the view
destroy: function () {
this.unstage();
this.remove();
this.off();
if (this.collection) {
this.collection.off(null, null, this);
}
if (this.model) {
this.model.off(null, null, this);
}
}
});
Updating my previous example to give the rows a draggable behavior would look like this:
var ItemView = BaseView.extend({
stage: function () {
this.$el.draggable({
revert: "invalid",
helper: "clone"
});
},
unstage: function () {
this.$el.draggable('destroy');
BaseView.prototype.unstage.call(this);
}
});
var ListView = BaseView.extend({
render: function () {
//same as before
this.unstage();
this.collection.each(function (model) {
var subview = new ItemView({
el: $table.find("#" + model.cid),
model: model
});
subview.stage();
this.views.push(subview);
}, this);
this.stage();
this.$el.empty();
this.$el.append($table);
return this;
}
});
http://jsfiddle.net/nikoshr/yL7g6/
Destroying the root view will traverse the hierarchy of views and perform the necessary cleanups.
NB: sorry about the JS code, I'm not familiar enough with Coffeescript to provide accurate snippets.
Ok, in order.. :)
Loading...
In case you want to validate data which stored on server, good practice do it on server-side. If validation on server will be unsuccessful, server should send not 200 HTTP code, therefore save metod of Backbone.Model will trigger error.
Other side, for validation data backbone has unimplemented validate method. I guess that right choise to implement and use it. But keep in mind that validate is called before set and save, and if validate returns an error, set and save will not continue, and the model attributes will not be modified. Failed validations trigger an "error" event.
Another way, when we call silent set(with {silent: true} param), we should call isValid method manually to validate data.
Too many things render themselves too much..
You have to separate your Views under their logic. Good practice for collection is separate view for each model. In this case you could render each element independently. And even more - when you initalizing your container view for collection, you could bind any event from each model in the collection to appropriate view, and they will render automatically.
Great, but the H2 at the start of the form is the same name as in the
input - you need to update it. Oh, and you need to update the name on
the list to the side.
you could use JQuery on method to implement callback which send value to display. Example:
//Container view
init: function() {
this.collection = new Backbone.Collection({
url: 'http://mybestpage.com/collection'
});
this.collection.bind('change', this.render, this);
this.collection.fetch();
},
render: function() {
_.each(this.collection.models, function(model) {
var newView = new myItemView({
model: model,
name: 'view' + model.id
});
this.$('#my-collection').append(newView.render().$el);
view.on('viewEdit', this.displayValue);
}, this);
},
...
displayValue: function(value) {
//method 1
this.displayView.setText(value); //we can create little inner view before,
//for text displaying. Сonvenient at times.
this.displayView.render();
//method 2
$(this.el).find('#display').html(value);
}
//View from collection
myItemView = Backbone.View.extend({
events: {
'click #edit': 'edit'
},
init: function(options) {
this.name = options.name;
},
...
edit: function() {
this.trigger('viewEdit', this.name, this);
}
OH, and the list sorts itself by names!
You can use sort method for backbone collections. But (!) Calling sort triggers the collection's "reset" event. Pass {silent: true} to avoid this. How to
Here's another example: You want to create a new item in the
collection...
When we press a "New" button we need to create a new model, but only when .save() method will trigger success, we should push this model to collection. In another case we should display error message. Of course we have no reasons to add a new model to our collection until it has been validated and saved on server.
It's subviews all the way down... subviews become zombie-like or do not respond.
when you (or any model) calling render method, all elements inside it will be recreated. So in case when you have subviews, you should call subView.delegateEvents(subView.events); for all of subviews; Probably this method is little trick, but it works.
Flickering..
Using thumbnails for big and medium images will minimize flickering in lot of cases. Other way, you could separate rendering of view to images and other content.
Example:
var smartView = Backbone.View.extend({
initialize: function(){
this.model.on( "imageUpdate", this.imageUpdate, this );
this.model.on( "contentUpdate", this.contentUpdate, this );
},
render: function(){
this.$el.html(this.template(this.model.toJSON()));
},
imageUpdate: function(){
this.$el.find('#image').attr('src', this.model.get('imageUrl'));
},
contentUpdate: function(){
this.$el.find('#content').html(this.model.get('content'));
}
})
I hope this helps anyone. Sorry for grammar mistakes, if any :)
Loading...
I'm a huge fan of eager loading. All my server calls are JSON responses, so it isn't a huge deal to make them more often than not. I usually refresh a collection every time it's needed by a view.
My favorite way to eager load is by using Backbone-relational. If I organize my app in a hierarchical manner. Consider this:
Organization model
|--> Event model
|--> News model
|--> Comment model
So when a user is viewing an organization I can eager load that organization's events and news. And when a user is viewing a news article, I eager load that article's comments.
Backbone-relational provides a great interface for querying related records from the server.
Too many things render themselves too much...
Backbone-relational helps here too! Backbone-relational provides a global record store that proves to be very useful. This way, you can pass around IDs and retrieve the same model elsewhere. If you update it in one place, its available in another.
a_model_instance = Model.findOrCreate({id: 1})
Another tool here is Backbone.ModelBinder. Backbone.ModelBinder lets you build your templates and forget about attaching to view changes. So in your example of collecting information and showing it in the header, just tell Backbone.ModelBinder to watch BOTH of those elements, and on input change, your model will be updated and on model change you view will be updated, so now the header will be updated.
It's subviews all the way down... subviews become zombie-like or do not respond...
I really like Backbone.Marionette. It handles a lot of the cleanup for you and adds an onShow callback that can be useful when temporarily removing views from the DOM.
This also helps to facilitate attaching jQuery plugins. The onShow method is called after the view is rendered and added to the DOM so that jQuery plugin code can function properly.
It also provides some cool view templates like CollectionView that does a great job of managing a collection and its subviews.
Flickering
Unfortunately I don't have much experience with this, but you could try pre-loading the images as well. Render them in a hidden view and then bring them forward.
I have a backbone collection and when I remove a model from the collection, I want it to remove the item from a list in the view.
My collection is pretty basic
MyApp.Collections.CurrentEvents = Backbone.Collection.extend({
model: MyApp.Models.Event
});
and in my views I have
MyApp.Views.CurrentEventItem = Backbone.View.extend({
el: 'div.current_event',
initialize: function(){
event = this.model;
_.bindAll(this, "remove");
MyApp.CurrentEvents.bind('remove',this.remove); //the collection holding events
this.render();
},
// yeah, yeah, render stuff here
remove: function(){
console.log(this);
$(this.el).unbind();
$(this.el).remove();
}
});
when I remove the model from the collection, it triggers the remove function, but the view is still on the page.
In the console, I can see the model, but I believe the model should have an 'el', but it doesn't.
My container code is
MyApp.Views.CurrentEventsHolder = Backbone.View.extend({
el: 'div#currentHolder',
initialize: function(){
MyApp.CurrentEvents = new MyApp.Collections.CurrentEvents();
MyApp.CurrentEvents.bind('new', this.add);
},
add: function(){
var add_event = new MyApp.Views.CurrentEventItem(added_event);
$('div#currentHolder').append(add_event.el);
}
});
for some reason in the add method I can't seem to use the $(this.el) before the append, though I'm not sure if that is the problem.
PROBLEM: MyApp.CurrentEvents.bind('remove',this.remove);
This triggers the remove() function every time any model is deleted from the collection.
This means that anytime a model is deleted, all the CurrentEventItem view instances will be deleted.
Now, about the view still being on the page:
It must have something to do with the way you appended/added/html-ed the view in the page. Check your other views, maybe if you have a CurrentEventsContainer view of some sort, check your code from there because with your current code, it does delete the view, albeit, all of them though.
RECOMMENDED FIX:
change your bindings to:
this.model.bind('remove',this.remove);
and make sure that when you instantiate it, pass on the model so that each view will have a corresponding model to it like so:
//...
addAllItem: function(){
_.each(this.collection, this.addOneItem())
},
addOneItem: function(model){
var currentEventItem = new MyApp.Views.CurrentEventItem({model:model});
//...more code..
}
//...
This makes things a lot easier to manage in my opinion.
UPDATE (from your updated question)
The reason you aren't able to use this.el is because you haven't passed the right context into the add() function. You need to add _.bindAll(this,'add') in your initialize() function to pass the right context, therefore making your this correct, allowing you to use this.el within the add function. Also, change your code to this:
MyApp.CurrentEvents.bind('new', this.add, this); this passes the right context. Also, why not use add instead as an event?
Continuing what I said in the comments, the way you've implemented this right now will remove all the CurrentEventItem views from the page when any of them is removed from the collection. The reason for this is the following:
MyApp.CurrentEvents.bind('remove',this.remove);
What this essentially says is, "every time the remove event is triggered on the collection, call this.remove." So, every time you instantiate one of these views, you're also telling the collection to remove that view when the collection triggers a remove event. I've created a fiddle to show you the problem.
You're right that Backbone knows which model has been removed from a collection, but you're not taking advantage of that. You can do that like so:
removeFromView: function(model) {
// Check to make sure the model removed was this.model
if (model.cid === this.model.cid) {
$(this.el).unbind();
$(this.el).remove();
}
}
See how this minor adjustment changes the behavior? Check it out in action here.
If you follow this pattern, you should see the proper views being removed.