37

If I enable pushState in the backbone router, do I need to use return false on all links or does backbone handle this automatically? Is there any samples out there, both the html part and the script part.

4 Answers 4

66

This is the pattern Tim Branyen uses in his boilerplate:

initializeRouter: function () {
  Backbone.history.start({ pushState: true });
  $(document).on('click', 'a:not([data-bypass])', function (evt) {

    var href = $(this).attr('href');
    var protocol = this.protocol + '//';

    if (href.slice(protocol.length) !== protocol) {
      evt.preventDefault();
      app.router.navigate(href, true);
    }
  });
}

Using that, rather than individually doing preventDefault on links, you let the router handle them by default and make exceptions by having a data-bypass attribute. In my experience it works well as a pattern. I don't know of any great examples around, but trying it out yourself should not be too hard. Backbone's beauty lies in its simplicity ;)

7
  • 4
    Just a heads up - I noticed that IE7 returned the absolute URL in some cases where I was expecting the relative URL. To handle this case, you'll want to normalize the value of href to be a relative path before calling navigate.
    – mshafrir
    Apr 28, 2012 at 8:06
  • 1
    Just curious, what is (href.slice(protocol.length) !== protocol) doing?
    – dezman
    Jan 28, 2014 at 22:45
  • This gist might help, it says "Ensure the protocol is not part of URL, meaning its relative." With that said, it seems like there'd be easier (and less obtuse) means to do such.
    – ken
    Feb 21, 2014 at 20:15
  • 2
    I could not find the snippet above about anchor handling anywhere in the boilerplate project. Has the project been emptied? Mar 10, 2014 at 10:22
  • 4
    Shouldn't href.slice(protocol.length) actually be href.slice(0, protocol.length)? Aug 4, 2014 at 17:55
9
 $(document.body).on('click', 'a', function(e){
   e.preventDefault();
   Backbone.history.navigate(e.currentTarget.pathname, {trigger: true});
 });
1

match() or startsWith() (ES 6) also can be used for checking protocol. If you want to support absolute urls by pathname property, check the base urls by location.origin.

function(evt) {
  var target = evt.currentTarget;
  var href = target.getAttribute('href');

  if (!href.match(/^https?:\/\//)) {
    Backbone.history.navigate(href, true);
    evt.preventDefault();
  }
  // or

  var protocol = target.protocol;

  if (!href.startsWith(protocol)) {
    // ...
  }
  // or

  // http://stackoverflow.com/a/25495161/531320
  if (!window.location.origin) {
    window.location.origin = window.location.protocol 
     + "//" + window.location.hostname
     + (window.location.port ? ':' + window.location.port: '');
  }

  var absolute_url = target.href;
  var base_url = location.origin;
  var pathname = target.pathname;

  if (absolute_url.startsWith(base_url)) {
    Backbone.history.navigate(pathname, true);
    evt.preventDefault();
  }
}
0

You can prevent the default behavior of click on <a> tags in html. Just add the below code inside <script /> tag.

<script>
$(document).on("click", "a", function(e)
{
    e.preventDefault();
    var href = $(e.currentTarget).attr('href');
    router.navigate(href, true);router
});
</script>

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