I'm trying to wrap my head around Ember resources but I'm hitting a wall. Looking at guides like Rails + Ember.js I see the preffered way of declaring a resource route is:
EmberTester.Router.map(function() {
this.resource('posts', function() {
this.resource('post', { path: ':post_id' });
});
});
This seems very convoluted, having to create a nested resource to access the individual items. But besides the element of style, the real problem is the behavior: such a route, from what I can see in the serverside log and in the client side browser traffic monitoring evaluates the model hooks for both the 'posts' route and the 'post' route. That is, given the model hooks:
EmberTester.PostsRoute = Ember.Route.extend({
model: function() {
return EmberTester.Post.find();
}
});
EmberTester.PostRoute = Ember.Route.extend({
model: function(params) {
return EmberTester.Post.find(params.post_id);
}
});
when visiting the url /posts/1
both model hooks get executed, so the server is first asked for all posts and then for post_id:1. I must be missing the obvious, but I can't put my finger on it what is it.
Is there a simpler way to declare resources in Ember? Should I not declare resources and instead use plain routes?