3

I'm trying understand how to work with Backbone collections and to pull them inside the relative template engine created by a sub view.

This is the logic i tried in my app:

enter image description here

My ajax request returns me this object:

{
    "products":[
        {
            "id":"43",
            "text":"Sunset Chips",
            "image":"43.png"
        },{
            "id":"107",
            "text":"Pringles Hot & Spicy",
            "image":"107.png"
        }
    ],
    "brands":[
        {
            "id":"132",
            "text":"P&G",
            "image":"132.png"
        },{
            "id":"27",
            "text":"Kinder",
            "image":"27.png"
        }
    ]
}

I grab it with jQuery's $.ajax method and manage it for my Backbone app here in my view:

<script type="text/javascript">

var search = {};

search.app = {};
search.app.id = "#search-results";

search.product = {};
search.product.defaults = {
    id:0,
    text:"<?php echo __('No results here');?>",
    image:"<?php echo $this->webroot;?>files/product/default.png",
};

$(function(){

    var SearchApp = new Search.Views.App({
        id:"#search-results"
    });

    var ProductList = new Search.Collections.Products();
    var subView;

    function parseResults (response, search) {

        for (var i = response.products.length - 1; i >= 0; i--) {
            ProductList.add([new Search.Models.Product(response.products[i])]);
        };

        subView = new Search.Views.Product ({
            collection:ProductList,
            id:"#product-results",
            template:"#results-product-template" // solo in this.options.template
        });

        updateResults();
    }

    function updateResults () {
        console.log('updateResults: Ritorno il risultato quando hunter riceve una risposta dal server');
        if ($('#search-results').length == 0) {
            $('div.main > section:first-child').before('<section id="search-results"></section>');
        }
        SearchApp.renderProductCollection(subView);
    }

    $('#search-results .close').on('click', function () {
        $('#search-results').animate({height:0}, 500, function () {
            $(this).remove();   
        })
    });

    var callbacks = {
        on_response:parseResults // function presente in backbone.search.js
    };

    $('#hunter').hunter({url:'<?php echo $this->request->base; ?>/searches/default_search', callback:callbacks, ajax_params:{limit:10, term:'%%'}});

});
</script>

This is my Backbone application:

var Search = {
    Models: {},
    Collections: {},
    Views: {},
    Templates:{}
}

Search.Models.Product = Backbone.Model.extend({
    defaults: search.product.defaults || {},
    initialize:function () {
        console.log("initialize Search.Models.Product");
        this.on("change", function (){
            console.log("chiamato evento change del Model Search.Models.Product");
        });
        this.on("change:text", function () {
            console.log("chiamato evento change:text del Model Search.Models.Product");
        });
    }
});

Search.Collections.Products = Backbone.Collection.extend({
    model: Search.Models.Product,
    initialize:function () {
        console.log("initialize Search.Collections.Products");
        console.log(this);
        console.log(this.length);
        console.log(this.models);
    }
});

Search.Views.App = Backbone.View.extend({
    initialize:function () {
        console.log("initialize Search.Views.App");
        this.$prd = this.$('#product-results');
    },
    render:function () {

        console.log("render Search.Views.App");
    },
    renderProductCollection:function (subView) {
        console.log("Search.Views.App > renderProductCollection");
        console.log('subView.getTemplate() => ' + subView.getTemplate());
        $(this.id).html(subView.getTemplate());
    }
});

Search.Views.Product = Backbone.View.extend({
    initialize:function () {
        console.log("initialize Search.Views.Product");
    },
    getTemplate:function (data) {
        if (data == null || data == undefined) {
            data = this.collection.toJSON() || this.model.toJSON(); 
        }
        var template = Handlebars.compile($(this.options.template).html());
        console.log(data);
        return '<ul id="product-results" class="w-1-4">' + template(data) + '</ul>';
    },
    render:function () {
        console.log("render Search.Views.Product");
        return this;
    }
});

The Handlesbar template is simply this:

<ul class="w-1-4">
    <li>
        <b>Products</b>
    </li>
   {{#each products}}
    <li>
        <a href="{{url}}">
            <div class="origin {{type}}" title="{{name}}"><img src="'.$this->webroot.'img/icons/16/origin/{{icon}}"></div>
        </a>
        <div>
            <a href="{{url}}" class="font-default-bold {{model}}-btn">{{name}}</a>
            {{#support}}<a href="{{support.url}}" class="font-small">{{support.name}}</a>{{/support}}
        </div>
    </li>
    {{/each}}
</ul>

My problem is when I try to parse the data inside the Handlesbar template, since I've parsed my data inside the sub view collection, I have an Array structured like this:

[
    {
        "id":"43",
        "text":"Sunset Chips",
        "image":"43.png"
    },{
        "id":"107",
        "text":"Pringles Hot & Spicy",
        "image":"107.png"
    }
]

With this data I don't have the products object anymore due to the parseResults in the view, where I put the ajax inside the collection.

How can I parse the products array without products prop name, or how I can keep the data in the right way?

I know in my app I can do something like this to solve the problem:

var container = new array();
container['products'] = this.collection.toJSON();
data = container;

var template = Handlebars.compile($(this.options.template).html());
return '<ul id="product-results" class="w-1-4">' + template(data) + '</ul>';

But is this the right way or I'm missing something?

1 Answer 1

0

You do not need to use $.ajax if you are working with Backbone.

Use collection.fetch http://backbonejs.org/#Collection-fetch

Also looks like the server is not giving you the answer as you need, so Backbone has its own parse: http://backbonejs.org/#Collection-parse

Also I'm a fan of logic less template. So the iteration through the collection must be in the view and not in the template. Also please check this(specially point two): http://ozkatz.github.io/avoiding-common-backbonejs-pitfalls.html

Use a collection in the right way, then to render it, in the view you could listen to the add or reset event and populate the collection in that way. this.collection.on('add', this.render); //get model by model this.collection.on('reset', this.render); //get all models (you need to specify in the fetch call a parameter {reset : true}

1
  • No problem, this question involves too much topics, if with the re-factor of code that you will do, you get new questions(specific by area, like fetch, or render, etc) please create it and we will be helping you. Apr 17, 2013 at 14:35

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