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I'm in the beginning stages of moving my application to the backbone framework.

I have some data that comes in as json from an ajax call

{f1:"f1_value", f2:"f2_value", f3:"f3_value"},
{f1:"f1_value", f2:"f2_value", f3:"f3_value"},
{f1:"f1_value", f2:"f2_value", f3:"f3_value"},

This data set always has 3 columns but may be as long as needed for each set as far as rows goes.

It is used to populate a div after processing it client side into HTML, which correlatively may extend down as far as needed. I was planning on this data chunk representing one view in the framework.

<div id = "data_hold"></div>

How do I match this up to the framework:

    var ModelTest,
        CollectionTest,
        ViewTest;

    ModelTest = Backbone.Model.extend({
    });
    CollectionTest = Backbone.Collection.extend({
        model: ModelTest
    }
    ViewTest = Backbone.View.extend({
    });

1 Answer 1

2

Backbone 101:

var ModelTest,
    CollectionTest,
    ViewTest;

ModelTest = Backbone.Model.extend({ });

// associate your collection with a URL.  This is static here; it can be
// passed in as an option using the Collection's initialize function()
// instead.

CollectionTest = Backbone.Collection.extend({
    model: ModelTest,
    url: 'http://localhost/my_json_source'
});

ViewTest = Backbone.View.extend({
    // Have a target to render into.  This can be an existing element, as  
    // here, or it can be dynamically generated and attached to the DOM
    // programattically.
    el: $('#data_hold'),

    // specify than when the collection is updated, call the local render
    // method.

    initialize: function(options) { 
        this.collection.bind('reset', _.bind(this.render, this));
    },

    // Empty the element, then append subsequent rows of the collection
    // to it as paragraphs.  The '_this = this' idiom allows us to access
    // the outside context (the View's context), since the each() call 
    // will create a new inner context.

    render: function() {
        var _this = this;
        this.$el.html('');
        this.collection.each(function(l) {
            _this.$el.append('<p>' + l.get('f2') + '</p>');
            });
    }
});

// initialize the collection and view, then fetch the collection, which
// will trigger the render after the collection has been updated.

$(function() {
    ct = new CollectionTest();
    vt = new ViewTest({collection: ct});
    ct.fetch();
});
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  • Does the ViewTest constructor require an object literal, or could you just pass in ct?
    – user1637281
    Mar 15, 2013 at 19:08
  • It requires an object literal. Views take a single argument, an "options" object. It scans the object for the following elements, and incorporates them automatically into the view if they're found when instantiated: 'model', 'collection', 'el', 'id', 'attributes', 'className', 'tagName', 'events.' All other options, you have to handle yourself in __initialize()__. I recommend reading the source code to Backbone.JS. Jeremy writes awesomely clean and understandable code. The signature and code path for View initialization will tell you everything you need to know. Mar 15, 2013 at 19:12
  • 1
    listenTo might be a better (or less zombie prone) choice than bind with newer Backbones. Mar 15, 2013 at 19:13
  • Yeah, and I'd love to do this in Coffeescript, where the fat arrow operator abstracts away entire layers of binding and the _this=this idiom. Mar 15, 2013 at 20:04
  • I understand the structure of this...but what makes it "go". From the documentation ... backbonejs.org/#Collection-fetch ... it appears Collection.fetch() will make it go. Everything else is automatic - view updating etc.?
    – user1637281
    Mar 15, 2013 at 21:45

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