4

Say I have a list of DefinedWord objects, which are each rendered in an {{#each}} block as a list of DefinedWordView divs at the bottom of the page.

When a user clicks a word, I lookup the associated DefinedWord. Now I want a reference to the DefinedWordView rendered for this DefinedWord, so I can ScrollTo() the DefinedWordView's div.

I can always have the views stamp each model object with a back-reference when they load, but it seems a little ugly. Not a big deal, but I think I'll need to do this for lots of other operations, and I'd rather not litter my model objects with back-references to views.

Anyone have suggestions for an ember-y idiom to handle this? Maybe EmberJS needs a standard "singleton view registry" or something?

5
  • Maybe you could render a uid of your DefinedWord into each view. Then you could fetch the div via jQuery. This would result in something like: $('.definedWordView#'definedWord.get('id')); But i guess you consider this being a dirty trick?
    – mavilein
    Nov 29, 2012 at 13:31
  • Nah, that'd be one of the ok ways to go, but I'm fishing to see if there's a way to do this from within the Ember layers....
    – Seth
    Nov 29, 2012 at 13:58
  • If you give an id to your view, I think you could access it through the Ember.View.views["yourId"]. Not sure if it works, but you can try it :)
    – sly7_7
    Nov 29, 2012 at 14:42
  • Any of these require manually tracking the relationship between Model and View....
    – Seth
    Nov 29, 2012 at 14:50
  • What do u mean by when a user clicks a word ? is that a different word from defined word ? Nov 29, 2012 at 20:02

2 Answers 2

2

Make your model use the Em.Evented mixin:

App.Word = Em.Object.extend(Em.Evented, {
  // ...
});

When your model is clicked, trigger an event on it, let's call it selected.

App.WordView = Em.View.extend({
  click: function () {
    // content == the model
    this.get('content').trigger('selected');
  }
})

The model's view can bind to that event and when it's fired, scroll to itself:

// just pseudo code:
App.DefinedWordView = Em.View.extend({
  init: function () {
    this._super();

    //listen for the 'selected' event and call 'scrollToDefinition' on 'this'
    this.get('content').on('selected', this, 'scrollToDefinition');
  },

  scrollToDefinition: function () {
    $(document).scrollTo( this.$() );
  }
})
4
  • I accepted your answer, because it was the primary inspiration for my final solution, found at stackoverflow.com/a/13664463/294247 . I don't think using properties for signalling is right, but its a simple modification to use Ember.Evented or simply use Ember.sendEvent directly
    – Seth
    Dec 1, 2012 at 22:38
  • Feel free to improve your answer using the code from mine, if you agree about using Ember.Evented, I didn't want to put words into your mouth.
    – Seth
    Dec 1, 2012 at 22:45
  • @Seth TIL that Ember.Evented exists. I don't like using properties for signaling but I didn't know a better way. Feel free to accept your own answer, or change mine. Dec 3, 2012 at 13:28
  • @Seth, since you haven't accepted your own answer, I changed my answer to incorporate yours. Let me know if it could be improved. Dec 13, 2012 at 18:29
1

https://stackoverflow.com/a/13638139/294247 was great, but it didn't seem right to use a property for signalling. I realized I should be using Events dispatched from the object, and letting views react as appropriate.

Using the Ember.Evented mixin:

App.DefinedWord = Ember.Object.extend(Ember.Evented, {
    // ...
    scrollToDefinition: function () {
        this.trigger('scrollToDefinition');
    }
});

App.DefinedWordView = Ember.View.extend({
    init: function () {
        this._super();
        this.get('content').on('scrollToDefinition', this, 'scrollToDefinition');
    },
    scrollToDefinition: function () {
        $(document).scrollTo(this.$());
    }
});

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