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I am a beginner in Knockout and I must say I often get confused regarding when to use (). Is there any general tip/trick regarding when would you use () against when you would not because at the moment I am just doing trial and error. If the binding throws error or doesn't update values I remove () else I put.

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3 Answers 3

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I feel like the existing answers skip over a very important point of confusion: data-bind attributes.

It is true that you use the parens when you are in Javascript, and getting or setting observables. But when you are writing data-bind="text: property", you leave out the parens even when working with observables.

Edit

As noted in the comment below, bindings that are expressions, or access properties of observbles, require parens

visible: personName().length > 0
visible: person().Name().length > 0
visible: person().isVisible

Note that the last one person and isVisisble are both observables, but the last property doesn't use parens! The reason for this is that we would be passing a value to the binding instead of an observable, and it wouldn't update.

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    Good point, the only exception being if a JavaScript expression is used inside the data-bind attribute, in which case parenthesis are required, e.g. visible: personName().length > 0
    – benrwb
    Jun 7, 2013 at 9:49
  • The parentheses also are required when using comment based virtual bindings, as in: <!-- ko foreach: observableArray() -->. I don't understand why this is the case, but as of 2.3.2, it is true.
    – x0n
    Jun 11, 2013 at 1:56
  • See stackoverflow.com/a/11318720/1154642 for another example of using an observable in an expression.
    – bryanbraun
    May 26, 2015 at 18:27
  • @ChrisHawkes I don't see how that is at all relevant to the question. Also, if you think a syntax gotcha is enough to ditch an entire library, I don't know how you tolerate React (which I love). className? Sometimes requiring quotes inside of brackets inside of JSX instead of raw strings? bind(this) all over the place? Everybody has some weirdness, it shouldn't be enough to throw the whole thing away!
    – Kyeotic
    Jan 14, 2016 at 16:59
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    I think this link will be helpfull knockmeout.net/2011/06/…
    – RJardines
    May 3, 2017 at 20:45
22

You use () in knockout when using observables or when executing any other method. Knockout observables are functions, invoked to return you what you looking for or allow you to assign new values.

In knockout you use object.property() to retrieve a value and object.property(newValue) to assign a value to that property.

On the knockout website checkout the documentation, specifically the section on observables, which shows you the use of the () when querying and writing observables.

To quote:

var myViewModel = {
    personName: ko.observable('Bob'),
    personAge: ko.observable(123)
};
  • To read the observable’s current value, just call the observable with no parameters. In this example, myViewModel.personName() will return 'Bob', and myViewModel.personAge() will return 123.

  • To write a new value to the observable, call the observable and pass the new value as a parameter. For example, calling myViewModel.personName('Mary') will change the name value to 'Mary'.

  • To write values to multiple observable properties on a model object, you can use chaining syntax. For example, myViewModel.personName('Mary').personAge(50) will change the name value to 'Mary' and the age value to 50.

Knockout's interactive tutorial is also quite nice and well worth going through.

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Basically whenever you're working with an observable value (array or otherwise) you should use the parentheses to get the value and set the value.

var something = ko.obserbable();
something(5); //set value
console.log(something()); //get value: 5

The reason being that most JS implementations do not support getters and setters for properties yet, so observables were implemented like this to get around this limitation.

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