Is it possible to apply MVC pattern to javascript?
3 Answers
Use Ember.js
These are the three features that make Ember a joy to use:
- Bindings
- Computed properties
- Auto-updating templates
Bindings
Use bindings to keep properties between two different objects in sync. You just declare a binding once, and Ember will make sure changes get propagated in either direction.
Here's how you create a binding between two objects:
MyApp.president = Ember.Object.create({
name: "Barack Obama"
});
MyApp.country = Ember.Object.create({
// Ending a property with 'Binding' tells Ember to
// create a binding to the presidentName property.
presidentNameBinding: 'MyApp.president.name'
});
MyApp.country.get('presidentName');
// "Barack Obama"
Bindings allow you to architect your application using the MVC (Model-View-Controller) pattern, then rest easy knowing that data will always flow correctly from layer to layer.
Computed Properties
Computed properties allow you to treat a function like a property. Computed properties are useful because they can work with bindings, just like any other property.
Auto-updating Templates
Ember uses Handlebars, a semantic templating library. To take data from your JavaScript application and put it into the DOM, create a tag and put it into your HTML, wherever you'd like the value to appear:
<script type="text/x-handlebars">
The President of the United States is {{MyApp.president.fullName}}.
</script>