During the initialize function of my app I would like to default to my search page and pass my LeagueCollection as the model.
I am encountering an issue where I can add a watch to this.searchResults in my App initialize and see models: Array[3] as expected, but when the this.model.toJSON() in the view is called I get the error object has no method toJSON.
This code was working fine with a in memory collection and then I switched to using backbone.localstorage.js to store the app data locally.
So my question is: why is the model not populated in the view?
In my main.js I have
var AppRouter = Backbone.Router.extend({
routes: {
"": "list",
...
},
initialize: function () {
this.searchResults = new LeagueCollection();
this.searchPage = new SearchPage({
model: this.searchResults.fetch()
});
this.searchPage.render();
},
...
});
In my Search Page view
window.SearchPage = Backbone.View.extend({
initialize:function () {
this.template = _.template(tpl.get('search-page'));
},
render:function (eventName) {
var self = this;
$(this.el).html(this.template(this.model.toJSON()));
this.listView = new LeagueListView({el: $('ul', this.el), model: this.model});
this.listView.render();
return this;
},
...
});
SearchPage
, if you want a collection you should call itcollection
rather thanmodel
.collection
if it is a collection, otherwise you'll just confuse everyone. View constructors treat thecollection
property specially just like themodel
parameter: backbonejs.org/#View-constructor{collection: c}
in the constructor call and refer to it asthis.collection
inside the view, less confusing that way.