More than a specific answer I'm trying to get recommendations on best practices when deciding how to structure view code. In my current project I have a clear/clean mapping of models to views but all these are presented inside a pretty standard container with global navigation elements. For the sake of this question, picture it this way:
- Header
- tabs
- cards
- card 1
- card 2
- card 3
You click on a header tab and a card slides in. the cards themselves have a back button that slides it out to reveal the previously displayed card. The actual content of the card is generated by another view which likely maps to a model. I guess it's not that much different than common interface patterns in iOS or Android.
Anyways, I want to have a view class called "Card" with a template with the navigation for the card, and whatever else goes in every card. Then I'd like to somehow pass the content of the card to it.
Can I create a Card class and then extend it to create the subclasses (ie: subviews)? So, say I have a model called UserModel and a view called UserView that takes care of the form for that model, I want to do something like:
var Card = Backbone.View.extend();
var UserView = Card.extend();
Then when rendering have that result in, say:
<!-- code from Card -->
<div class="card">
<nav></nav>
<!-- code from UserView -->
<div class="user">
...
</div>
<!-- END code from UserView -->
</div>
<!-- code from Card -->
I realize a quick way to do this would be to simply manually grab the Card template from every view that I need wrapped, etc... but that feels wrong.
Does that make sense?
Oh... keep in mind that part of the advantage that I'm hoping this has is that I can interact with the UserView instance and have those trigger the necessary methods in the parent class. So...
var uv = new UserView();
uv.render() // <- should render the user view with the card wrapped around it.
I don't want to have to manually render the card, of course.
How would you structure it?
Thanks!