I've recently started using Backbone.js. I like the architecture, in terms of features it's almost exactly what I need...
... However I found the following caveats:
- For
Collectionsgetmeans something different than forModels. There is noset. Attributes should be accessed in a regular way. I find it rather inconsistent. It's easy to confuse models and collections sometimes. Is there anything that can be done to overcome this? - Assigning initial values inside
Model.extenddoesn't always work. For example assigningurlwill not override the default behaviour. This can only be achieved through a call toset()method. Again very error prone. - I still don't know whether it's required to use
get/setinsideinitialize()call. - I don't understand why I can't just call
_.bindAll(this)insideinitialize()and I have to list specific function names to be bound like this:_.bindAll(this, firstFunc, secondFunc, ...). This is not very DRY.
I would like to know: what are the best practices regarding the mentioned situations? What do you do to make the framework more consistent - any monkey patching? Am I doing anything wrong / against the convention?
I'd be grateful for any good real world examples. I did find this: http://documentcloud.github.com/backbone/docs/todos.html and http://liquidmedia.ca/blog/2011/01/backbone-js-part-1/ and those don't address any of the mentioned problems. In fact they just present the simplest ideas and absolutely no border cases, so anything more complicated could be useful.
EDIT:
Ok, and there is one more fundamental think I don't understand:
- Am I ever allowed to place additional attributes on extension like this:
var SomeModel = Backbone.Model.extend({ myattribute: myvalue })?- If so, then why don't subsequent calls to
new SomeModel().get("myattribute")work ?
- If so, then why don't subsequent calls to
- What exactly is
thisinsideinitialize()? Is it model class or model instance ?
EDIT(2):
Well, I found this: http://maccman.github.com/spine/. It looks like Backbone.js 2.0, shares a similar name too :). Haven't tested it yet, which might be a bit of a show stopper, as the library is very recent. However from the docs side of things it looks very promissing. It gets rid of most of the problems that I found, it simplifies the API, it even gets rid of the dependency on underscore.js which for a library is a good thing. I'll post my further findings here.