1

Here my class :

function Cart(){
   if (typeof Cart.instance === 'object') {
      return Cart.instance;
   }
   Cart.instance = this;

   //the other method....

   var self = this;
   var items = window.localStorage.getItem(Cart.storageName);
   this.addToCart = function(item){

      if (!(items instanceof Array)) items = [];
      var itemIndex = getItemIndexById(items, item.ID);
      if(typeof(itemIndex) === 'number'){
         items[itemIndex].QuantityInCart++;
      }
      else{
         item.QuantityInCart = 1;
         items.push(item);
      }
      window.localStorage.setItem(Cart.storageName, serializeObjToJSON(items));
   };
}

Cart.storageName = "Cart";

Then I call addToCart function in Home view when I click on addToCart button:

define(["jquery" ,
   "underscore" ,
   "backbone" ,
   "text!templates/Home/homePanel.html",
   "text!templates/Item/itemTemplate.html"
],function($ , _ , Backbone , HomePanel, ItemTemplate){

 var promotionItem = _.template(ItemTemplate);
 var homePanel = _.template(HomePanel);
 var HomeView = Backbone.View.extend({
   initialize: function() {
       myCart1.updateQtyLabel("qtyCart");
       window.localStorage.setItem("User",serializeObjToJSON(customer));
   },
   el: '#webbodycontainer',
   events : {
       "click #addToCart" :  function(){
           myCart1.addToCart(newItem);
           myCart1.updateQtyLabel("qtyCart");
           $("#containernewpromotion").html(promotionItem);
       }
   },
   render : function(){
       this.$el.html(homePanel);
       $("#containernewpromotion").html(promotionItem);
   }
});
 return HomeView;
});

But when I click to the other view, then back to Home view, and click addToCart button again, the item is increasing 2 times (addToCart method executes two time). If I continue to another view and click on the button again , addToCart method executes 3 times.... Always +1 of addToCart method executing when I go to other view and come back to click on add to cart button.

Any idea what could be causing this. Thanks.

7
  • Check that you're not instantiating a HomeView each time you go back to home.
    – Loamhoof
    Oct 25, 2013 at 8:34
  • @Loamhoof: excuse me, what did you mean here? I just back to HomeView on click <a href='#'>.
    – Nothing
    Oct 25, 2013 at 9:20
  • Are you removing the View? If not it makes perfect sense since your events are not being unbound. When navigating from view to view, make sure you call view.remove(). This will cleanup events and remove the view from the dom. Oct 25, 2013 at 10:14
  • Yes, it's sames each time you come back to HomeView you initialized it again and the events are delegated each time you initialized it. #addToCart button is out of HomeView right? It is not inside its template. If it was inside then you will not have this problem. Try it if you want. Let me see the way you initialize the view. Do you initialize it in the method of the Router? I avoid to initialize it several times saving the instance in a property of my app and if it does not exist y create it: if(!this.home) { this.home=new HomeView(); } this.selectedView = this.home; this.selectedView.show()
    – ccsakuweb
    Oct 25, 2013 at 10:36
  • @ccsakuweb : Here : app_router.on('route:home', function( ){ var homeView = new HomeView({}); homeView.render(); });
    – Nothing
    Oct 26, 2013 at 0:12

1 Answer 1

1

With the information that you told me I think that the problem is that you are creating the view each time you visit the url. I am going to show you what I do when I am going to show a new view or a view that was visible before.

The first thing is that I have the application separated by modules. Each module is a tab and I have all the modules saved in app. So when I want to change the visible view using the url I use a method of app called showSection(SECTION_NAME)

But in your case you will need the next modification:

app_router.on('route:home', function( ){ 
    if(window.currentSection)
        window.currentSection.remove(); //always in your routes destroy the current view
    window.currentSection = new HomeView({}); 
    $("body").append(window.currentSection.$el); 
    window.currentSection.render();
});

Like always is the same in all the routes I use that showSection. And also I have saved some views that are persistent in the time and only hided. So my method app.showSection in app is:

showSection: function (sectionNAME) {
    if(this.currentSection)
        this.currentSection.hide();

    switch(sectionNAME) {
        case "homeNotPersistent":
            if(this.home)
                this.home.remove();
        case "homeNotPersistent":
        case "home": 
            if(!this.home){
               this.home = new HomeView();
               this.$el.append(this.home.$el);
            }
            this.currentSection = this.home;
            break; 
        ...
    }
    this.currentSection.render();
}

I hope it helps. Destroy is the one you told (Destroy or remove a view in Backbone.js). But I use a close method in my project an idea I got from http://lostechies.com/derickbailey/2011/09/15/zombies-run-managing-page-transitions-in-backbone-apps/

I hope I helped you

Edit: I changed destroy for remove from backbonejs >= 1.0 Suggested by @TyroneMichael

20
  • app.currentSection.destroy(); where did the app come from?
    – Nothing
    Oct 27, 2013 at 6:19
  • 1
    You need to save an instance of the view you are viewing at the moment to hide it or destroy it after. You can save home or currentsection in a view that contains all the views (that is app for me, it contains a header common between all the views) or you can use window.currentSection instead if you don't like to have a view like this. You can add showSection in window also or in your approuter. Save the instance wherever is better in your project
    – ccsakuweb
    Oct 27, 2013 at 6:44
  • Hmm... It's so hard to understand, maybe because I'm just a newbie with backbone :/
    – Nothing
    Oct 27, 2013 at 6:58
  • 1
    With Backbone >= 1.0, you can use remove opposed to destory? It removes the view from the dom and unbinds events. Oct 27, 2013 at 7:05
  • @TyroneMichael You are right, and if I have subviews I would inherit remove and remove each of them. It is nice to have remove now as method of a view. I implemented close before listenTo methods.
    – ccsakuweb
    Oct 27, 2013 at 14:14

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.