0

I have a simple viewmodel:

<input data-bind="value: url">
<a id=url-host data-bind="attr: { href: url }"></a>
<div data-bind="visible: isValidUrl">
    This is not a valid URL
</div>

function () {
    var self = this;
    self.url = ko.observable();

    self.isValidUrl = ko.computed(function () {
       return !!$("#url-host").get(0).protocol;
    });
}

The problem I'm having is that the isValidUrl does not appear to be triggered when the input changes. I can fix this by adding self.url() anywhere inside the ko.computed function. It seems like ko.computed will only be triggered if it contains a call to an observable, which actually does make sense.

However, by adding self.url() to the code above, the $("#url-host") href attribute is actually still undefined. This means that isValidUrl occurs before the attr set binding does. My question is twofold:

  1. How can I make sure that the attr value is set before the isValidUrl computed function runs?
  2. Seemingly the isValidUrl should depend on the completion of the attr binding rather than the value. Is there a proper way to do this?
2
  • why take the url from the dom and not from the url variable? Jul 8, 2013 at 15:09
  • @Circadian the <a> can be used like a Location object Jul 8, 2013 at 16:40

5 Answers 5

2

it is not clear what you try to achieve. but you use knockoutjs to avoid this dom selection especially when you assign the url.

i have created a fiddle which roughly does what I suspect you might want

self.isValidUrl = ko.computed(function () {
   return !!URI(self.url()).protocol();
});

I had to resort to Uri.js library since I couldn't find way to take the protocol from a string in plain javascript.

4
  • self.url() returns the value of the input, not the anchor Jul 8, 2013 at 15:15
  • but you set the value of the input as anchor! so when you update the input you update the variable you update the isvalid Jul 8, 2013 at 15:17
  • Can't see why this answer was down voted, it seems the best way to do it to me. As a general rule, you should be avoiding accessing any UI elements from within your knockout models.
    – DoctorMick
    Jul 8, 2013 at 15:56
  • @DoctorMick I only do this so I can use the <a> as a location object; I could also create one on the fly which would do essentially the same thing, though Jul 8, 2013 at 16:41
0

You can use the "throttle" extender to delay the evaluation of the computed observable:

self.isValidUrl = ko.computed(function () {
    self.url();
    return !!$("#url-host").get(0).protocol;
}).extend({ throttle: 1 });

However, note that the observable "url" is only updated once the input field looses focus, not while you're typing.

4
  • So is it common practice to call the observable dependency of the computed function as a noop to get it to trigger properly? Jul 8, 2013 at 15:15
  • @ExplosionPills No, that actually indicates that you're applying the underlying concept in a wrong manner. When the content of the observable "url" changes the view is updated, ok so far. But you're then reading a value back from the view that was generated there based on the new value of "url" - which is just wrong, the view never generates any data (other than direct user input). This logic belongs in the ViewModel, so you should actually implement the URL validation in the computed observable using the content from self.url() and don't do such dirty tricks ;) (or live with this of course)
    – Niko
    Jul 8, 2013 at 16:06
  • How can I use self.url() to do the validation in that case? Jul 8, 2013 at 16:32
  • Well, you'd need to implement the validation logic by yourself or use any third-party library that does that for you.
    – Niko
    Jul 8, 2013 at 16:46
0

ad 1. As soon as you make a call to ko.applyBindings() the DOM is going to be traversed and all bindings are resolved. The url variable is still undefined at that time because that is how you initialize it.

ad 2. Further, as you correctly stated, a computed variable should depend on an observable. If you don't want to do that (for whatever reason) you can still subscribe to your url observable and inside the callback refer to the href attribute. See the documentation here.

myViewModel.url.subscribe(function(newValue) {
  // use $("#url-host") here
  // ...
});
0

I'm not sure there is a timing issue here:

  1. The determination of whether to show the validation message is keying off the true value rather than the false. see html below or this fiddle.

  2. The anchor's protocol doesn't seem to behave the same in all browsers. In firefox protocol always returns "http" and in IE it does return what you type in. Might be different for others.

Getting the isValidUrl computed to fire more than once in this scenario does require a trigger and in this example I used the url observable.

self.isValidUrl = ko.computed(function () {
    var trigger = self.url(); // trigger re-evaluation
   return !!$("#url-host").get(0).protocol;
});

<div data-bind="visible: !isValidUrl()">
    This is not a valid URL
</div>
-1

Have you tried initialising your observable with a blank value, to stop it being undefined?

self.url = ko.observable('');

And then referencing self.url() inside your computed (I think that you are correct in assuming that a computed should rely on an observable in your case).

You could also add the valueUpdate binding to your input:

<input data-bind="value: url, valueUpdate: keyup">

so that the value is updated with each key press, rather than when you blur out of the input.

Other than that, I'd say that you don't need the attr value to be set before isValidUrl runs. It will run each time you change the input value.

I've created a jsFiddle with this code.

4
  • That doesn't make any difference (same if I initialize it to a specific value). I guess my main question is how can I create a computed observable that depends on a value calculated from the DOM as opposed to a general KO binding Jul 8, 2013 at 15:03
  • Well, it should make a difference to it being undefined. Have you put a break point inside your computed and see if it's being hit when you put text in the input? Jul 8, 2013 at 15:05
  • Not without adding self.url() to the computed function Jul 8, 2013 at 15:16
  • You need to put self.url in the computed. That's the point of computeds, they are computed off an observable. Look at my fiddle, and let me know what problem you have with it, as I think it's doing what you want, though you'd need to expand the is valid method to do some actual checking. Jul 8, 2013 at 15:18

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