I'm building my first Backbone.js app and I'm confused about how much responsibility I'm supposed to give to or hide from my Views.
In my example, I'm building a Rich UI Table (similar to YUI's datagrid) that's dynamically generated from a Collection. In my app I call this an "AppTable". In my understanding of MVC, I would imagine that there'd be some kind of AppTable controller which finds the correct Collection, grabs a "dumb" View and passes to the View whatever information from the Collection it needs to render. In this senario, the View would do little more than take the data provided to it and modify the DOM accordingly, maybe even populating a template or attaching event listeners.
Backbone seems to do away with the idea of having a controller mediate between the View and Collection. Instead a View gets initialized with a reference to a Collection and it is View's responsibility to update itself.
Am I understanding this architecture correctly?
Assuming I do, my question then becomes, what happens when my View needs to do more and more? For example, I want column sorting, drag-and-drop for rows, pagination, searching, table control links (like new, copy, delete row... etc), and more. If we stick with a "smart" View paradigm where the View is connected directly to a Collection, do the above functions become attached to View object?
Thinking through this, I could see the View growing from a simple table wrapper to pretty messy beast with lot of functionality attached to it. So, is the View really a controller in this case?