This post is pretty old, but we were reviewing it earlier today, so in case anyone else comes across it:
To me, I really see 2 separate questions:
- Where should the mechanics of data fetching and the resulting view rendering happen, in the router or a view?
- Should views expect already resolved models, or should they respond to models that may still be loading?
A bit of how we handle it mixed with some personal preferences:
- Neither, although I'd lean closer to the router. Routers should handle routing, views should handle viewing, and something else should handle the mechanics and workflow of Model/Collection fetching logic. We call that something else a Controller, which the Router basically delegates to.
- As Yuri alludes to, 'sometimes' is a reality. I think this is probably a case by case decision, but should ultimately be a contract between a Controller and View, rather than between the Router/View.
I like Yuri's bullet points, with a couple caveats (indented bullets):
- The router only knows where to send the user
- The outer view only knows what the user should be viewing (given its data)
- Assuming the outer view is specific to the inner view's use case and is 'owned' by another view (for clean up)
- Otherwise for generic containers(like rendering into a 'main' location), we've found it useful to have a component that manages the views for a certain 'section' on the page - we call it a Renderer
- The inner views only know how to show only their little piece of it all (and
can be used elsewhere)
- and The render function always shows the right thing as of right now.
- In the case of a generic container, it'd ultimately be the responsibility of the Renderer
The main reason for the Renderer is to handle things related to that section, like cleaning up existing views to avoid ghost views, scrolling to the top on render (our MainContentRenderer does that), or showing a spinner in this case.
A psuedo-code-ish example of what that might look like, for:
- a generic content target 'main' (if it's use case specific, may be better off with a ComponentView as per Yuri's example, depending on your view lifecycle management strategy)
- a model we have to fetch and wait on
- a view that accepts an already loaded model
Router:
routes: {
"profile": "showProfile"
},
showProfile: function() {
return new ProfileController().showProfile();
}
ProfileController:
showProfile: function() {
//simple case
var model = new Model();
var deferredView = model.fetch.then(function() {
return new View(model);
};
MainContentRenderer.renderDeferred(deferredView);
}
MainContentRenderer:
var currentView;
renderDeferred: function(deferredView) {
showSpinner();
deferredView.then(function(view) {
this.closeSpinner();
this.closeCurrentView();
this.render(view);
}
},
render: function(view) {
currentView = view;
$('#main-content').html(view.render().el);
}
closeCurrentView: function() {
if (currentView and currentView.close()) {
currentView.close();
}
}
Introducing a Controller also has the added benefit of testability. For example, we have complex rules for performing searches around URL management, picking between a results view and a new search view, and picking between a cached 'last' search result and executing a new search. We have Jasmine tests for the controllers to verify that all that flow logic is correct. It also provides an isolated place to manage these rules.