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I am using backgrid.js with backbone.js. I'm trying to populate JSON (user list) in backgrid. Below is my JSON,


    [{"name": "kumnar", "emailId":"[email protected]", 
    "locations":{"name":"ABC Inc.,", "province":"CA"}
    }]

I can access name & emailId as below,


    var User = Backbone.Model.extend({});
    var User = Backbone.Collection.extend({
        model: User,
        url: 'https://localhost:8181/server/rest/user',
    }); 

    var users = new User();
    var columns = [{
            name: "loginId",
            label: "Name",
            cell: "string"
        }, {
            name: "emailId",
            label: "E-mail Id",
            cell: "string"
        }
    ]; 

    var grid = new Backgrid.Grid({
        columns: columns,
        collection: users
    });

    $("#grid-result").append(grid.render().$el);
    userEntities.fetch();

My question is, how do I add a column for showing locations.name?

I have specified locations.name in the name property of columns but it doesn't work. { name: "locations.name", label: "E-mail Id", cell: "string" }

Thanks

2 Answers 2

3

Both backbone and backgrid currently don't offer any support for nested model attributes, although there are a number of tickets underway. To properly display the locations info, you can either turn the locations object into a string on the server and use a string cell in backgrid, or you can attempt to supply your own cell implementation for the locations column.

Also, you may try out backbone-deep-model as it seems to support the path syntax you are looking for. I haven't tried it before, but if it works, you can just create 2 string columns called location.name and location.province respectively.

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3

It's really easy to extend Cell (or any of the existing extensions like StringCell). Here's a start for you:

var DeepstringCell = Backgrid.DeepstringCell = StringCell.extend({

    render: function () {
        this.$el.empty();
        var modelDepth = this.column.get("name").split(".");
        var lastValue = this.model;
        for (var i = 0;i<modelDepth.length;i++) {
            lastValue = lastValue.get(modelDepth[i]);
        }
        this.$el.text(this.formatter.fromRaw(lastValue));
        this.delegateEvents();
        return this;
    },

});

In this example you'd use "deepstring" instead of "string" for your "cell" attribute of your column. Extend it further to use a different formatter (like EmailFormatter) if you want to reuse the built-in formatters along with the deep model support. That's what I've done and it works great. Even better is to override the Cell definitions to look for a "." in the name value and treat it as a deep model.

Mind you, this only works because I use backbone-relational which returns Model instances from "get" calls.

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