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I have a parent route. Inside this route there is a component that is rendered.

The route has a template.hbs file that contains a HTML div element. I need to be able to change the class of this div element from within my child component.

To do this, I was planning on using a service. The idea being inject the service into both the route and child component and then bind the class of the div to a property on the service. Then, when I inject the service into the child component I can change the property and see any changes reflected by the parent route.

Problem is, the binding doesn't seem to work!

Parent Route:

Template: <div class={{model.containerClass}}>

Route.js:

dashboardContainerManager: service('dashboard-container-manager'),

afterModel(model) {
   model.set('containerClass', this.get('dashboardContainerManager').dashboardContainerClass);

SERVICE:

export default Service.extend({
  dashboardContainerClass: null,

  init() {
    debugger; //placed to ensure one instance being made
    this._super(...arguments);
    this.set('dashboardContainerClass', 'container dashboard-container'); //need to set it here to prevent glimmer error
  },

  changeContainerClass(newClass) {
    debugger;
    this.set('dashboardContainerClass', newClass);
  }
});

Child Component:

  dashboardContainerManager: service('dashboard-container-manager'),
  init() {
    this._super(...arguments);
    this.get('dashboardContainerManager').changeContainerClass('test');
  },

The result of the above code is that the class of my div is initially set to "container dashboard-container" because that's the value that the dashboardContainerClass property on my service is initialised to. However, when the value is changed to "test" inside my component, the class of my div isn't updated which suggests it's not bound properly to the value of dashboardContainerClass. I tried using a computed property in various places as well but couldn't get anything to work.

What am I doing wrong here?!

1 Answer 1

2

There is a reads computed property macro that'd help you out here:

https://emberjs.com/api/ember/3.7/functions/@ember%2Fobject%2Fcomputed/reads

in your component, you'd just do something like:

import { reads } from '@ember/object/computed';

  // ...
  dashboardContainerManager: service('dashboard-container-manager'),

  containerClass: reads('dashboardContainerManager.dashboardContainerClass'),

Update / full example:

service:

export default Service.extend({
  dashboardContainerClass: 'container dashboard-container',

  changeContainerClass(newClass) {
    this.set('dashboardContainerClass', newClass);
  }
});

route:

export default Route.extend({
  // removed afterModel and service injection
});

controller:

export default Controller.extend({
  containerManager: service('dashboard-container-manager'),

  containerClass: reads('containerManager.dashboardContainerClass'),
});

template:

<div class='some-other-class {{containerClass}}'>
  other stuff
</div>
8
  • Thanks I'll try it out. Do you mean to say inside my route.js (instead of in my component)?
    – HelloWorld
    Jan 30, 2019 at 16:24
  • ah! no, I mean inside a component or controller. A route's scope is different from the template scope. Routes are just for managing routing events / before/model/after hooks, so if you want to access anything from a route's corresponding template, it needs to be specified in the controller. Hope this helps! Jan 30, 2019 at 16:27
  • That's why I've been setting the property on the model inside the afterModel() method...So that it can be accessed from the template . - p.s didn't work x((((((
    – HelloWorld
    Jan 30, 2019 at 16:30
  • ok, gotchya. The model won't update when the service property updates, but a computed property will. The model only updates when a navigation or route param changes Jan 30, 2019 at 16:33
  • I'll add some additional code for how I'd do the whole thing, one sec Jan 30, 2019 at 16:34

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