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I have a Collection which specifies a Model which itself has an idAttribute set, as my backend uses a custom field for the primary key. The code is like this:

var SearchItemModel = Backbone.Model.extend({
    idAttribute: 'searchDefId'
});

var savedSearchesCollection = new SavedSearchesCollection({
    model: SearchItemModel
});

It's my understanding that I should be able to find the model by doing that.collection.get(searchDefIdValue), but I can't. Below, you can see that my collection has two models. If I try to get the model based on Backbone's cid of 'c44', then it can find it no problem. But if I try to search on the custom id field 'searchDefId', it can't find it. I thought Backbone was supposed to copy the value of the idAttribute into id, but I don't see any 'id' field.

Also note that I can find the model using that.collection.where({ searchDefId: data.searchDefId})[0] but that seems like it may be more expensive.

console output

1 Answer 1

2

I think the problem is that you pass options as first argument to SavedSearchesCollection when Backbone.Collection expects it to be models. This also is proved by lack of model property on that.collection.

Try

var savedSearchesCollection = new SavedSearchesCollection([], {
    model: SearchItemModel
});
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  • 2
    And normally you'd specify model: SearchItemModel when creating SavedSearchesCollection rather than when you instantiate the collection. Sep 10, 2013 at 22:03
  • No luck. I'm pretty sure that's an optional parameter. Otherwise how would the view work at all.
    – T Nguyen
    Sep 11, 2013 at 1:25
  • @muistooshort: As with most things in Backbone, you can either specify it in the class or when you create the instance. The Backbone docs themselves show it being done both ways: backbonejs.org/#Collection
    – T Nguyen
    Sep 11, 2013 at 1:27
  • @TNguyen: Hence the normally qualification. I haven't seen many cases where it makes sense to not specify the model when defining the collection. If you're still having trouble then maybe you need to set up a functional example of your problem so that we can see what's really going on. Sep 11, 2013 at 1:35
  • Strange. Looks like you're right, mu. It shouldn't matter but specifying the model in the class rather than the instance made a difference. If you submit that as an answer, I'll accept it. FWIW, I always try to specify parameters in the instantiation. It makes the class more generalized and is more semantic by stating "I want to create an object of this type but with these specific properties". The Collection class shouldn't need to know what model it's dealing with. It shouldn't care.
    – T Nguyen
    Sep 11, 2013 at 1:41

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