1

I am trying to split an ember store record into 3 columns for display purposes. I am attempting to do this in a controller action but I have a feeling this is wrong due to the way promises are filled.

Gist of how I would like my data to look (handlebar friendly).

var events = [
  {column: ['work1','work2','work3']}, 
  {column: ['priv1','priv2','priv3']}, 
  {column: ['mail1','mail2','mail3']}
];

Below is the code I am running. When I attempt to arrange the events into a different object no data is stored.

//app/controllers/index.js
import Ember from 'ember';

export default Ember.Controller.extend({
    columns: function(){
        var events = this.store.find('event');
        var columns = [[],[],[]];
        var count = 0;
        events.forEach(function(item, index, enumerable){
            columns[count].push(item);
            count++;
            if (count === 4){
              count = 0;
            }
        });
        columns = [{column: columns[0]}, {column: columns[1]}, {column: columns[2]}];
        return columns;
    }.property()
});

.

//app/templates/index.hbs
<div class="row">
  {{#each 'columns'}}
    <div class="col-lg-4">
      {{#each 'column'}}
        {{this}}
      {{/each}}
    </div>
  {{/each}}
</div>

1 Answer 1

1

find returns a promise, so you need to wait for it to resolve before you can use it. Additionally you should use pushObject so that Ember is aware you've added a new item to the array.

export default Ember.Controller.extend({
    columns:[[],[],[]],
    setupColumns: function(){
        var eventsPromise = this.store.find('event'),
            columns = [[],[],[]],
            count = 0,
            self = this;
        eventsPromise.then(function(events){
          events.forEach(function(item, index, enumerable){
            columns[count].pushObject(item);
            count++;
            if (count === 4){
              count = 0;
            }
          });
          self.set('columns', [{column: columns[0]}, {column: columns[1]}, {column: columns[2]}]);
        });
    }.on('init')
});

Honestly you should resolve the model before the controller (in the route), it would make this significantly easier.

4
  • Should I be interacting with the eventPromise any differently if I resolve the model in the route? I've done this and it works fine with the code above but I wasn't sure if there is a better way. Thanks!
    – MikeV
    Jul 29, 2014 at 13:57
  • are you returning it from the model hook? How are you using?
    – Kingpin2k
    Jul 29, 2014 at 15:37
  • I think I figured it out. I loaded the model in the route then I used var events = this.get('model'); to build my columns array.
    – MikeV
    Jul 31, 2014 at 14:05
  • yeah, if you resolve it in the route, you can switch back to it being a computed property, which feels cleaner to me.
    – Kingpin2k
    Jul 31, 2014 at 14:21

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