Backbone.Chosen

0.1.1 • Public • Published

Backbone.Chosen

One Collection, different models, mapped easy via configuration.

Backbone.Chosen gives your Backbone Collections multiple personalities. It is related to the following Backbone Issue (it´s more a feature request) #1148

It gives you the ability to have a collection with instances of different models prototypes. Lets outline this with a small example that backbone can´t handle on its own:

You fetch a set of json data, lets say some filesystem contents:

[ 
  {
    "id": 1,
    "name": "afile.txt",
    "size": 24234,
    "type": "file"
   },   
  {
    "id": 2,
    "name": "adir",
    "type": "dir" 
  }
]

Then you create a collection containing all of this entries, but you want create different models for files and directories.

With the standard behaviour of Backbone, this is not possible. Backbone.Chosen to the rescue.

Build Status, Project Page, Annotated Source & Tests

Build Status

Project Page
Docs
Tests
NPM registry

Installation

Source Code And Downloads

You can download the raw source code from the "src" folder above, or grab one of the builds from the root directory.

To get the latest stable release, use these links which point to the 'master' branch's builds:

Development: backbone.chosen.js Production: backbone.chosen.min.js

VOLO

$ volo add Backbone.Chosen

NPM

$ npm install Backbone.Chosen

Integration

Note: This plugin is UMD compatible, you can use it in node, amd and vanilla js envs

Vanilla JS

<script src="underscore.js"></script>
<script src="backbone.js"></script>
<script src="backbone.chosen.js"></script>

Node

var _ = require('underscore');
var Backbone = require('backbone');
var Chosen = require('backbone.chosen');

AMD

define(['underscore', 'backbone', 'backbone.chosen'], function (_, Backbone, Chosen) {
});

Usage

Mapping attributes to models

A simple example how to map some data based on an attribute:

    // Set up the models
    var SaltyModel = Backbone.Model.extend({
        defaults: {
            taste: 'salty'
        }
    });
    var SweetyModel = Backbone.Model.extend({
        defaults: {
            taste: 'sweet'
        }
    });
    var BoringModel = Backbone.Model.extend({
        defaults: {
            taste: null
        }
    });
 
    // Set up the collection
    var Collection = Backbone.Collection.extend({
        model: {
            chosen: {
                attr: 'spice',
                defaults: BoringModel,
                map: {
                    salt: SaltyModel,
                    sugar: SweetyModel
                }
            }
        }
    });
 
    // Set up the data
    var flavours = [{
        id: 1,
        spice: 'salt'
    }, {
        id: 2,
        spice: 'sugar'
    }];
 
    // Init collection with static data
    var collection = new Collection(flavours);
 
    collection.get(1) instanceof SaltyModel // true
    collection.get(2) instanceof SweetyModel // true

Set a default model

If none of your mappings matches, you always have to insert a fallback aka. default model:

    // Set up test models
    var SaltyModel = Backbone.Model.extend({
        defaults: {
            taste: 'salty'
        }
    });
    var SweetyModel = Backbone.Model.extend({
        defaults: {
            taste: 'sweet'
        }
    });
    var BoringModel = Backbone.Model.extend({
        defaults: {
            taste: null
        }
    });
 
    // Set up test collection
    var Collection = Backbone.Collection.extend({
        model: {
            chosen: {
                attr: 'spice',
                defaults: BoringModel,
                map: {
                    salt: SaltyModel,
                    sugar: SweetyModel
                }
            }
        }
    });
 
    // Set up the mock data
    var flavours = [{
        id: 1,
        spice: 'salt'
    }, {
        id: 2,
        spice: 'sugar'
    }, {
        id: 3,
        spice: 'sour'
    }];
 
    // Init collection with mock data
    var collection = new Collection(flavours);
 
    collection.get(3) instanceof BoringModel // true

Mapping deeper nested attributes

If the attribute your trying to map, is deeper nested in your incoming JSON, the deeper nested attributes mapping makes smth. like this possible:

    // Set up some models
    var SaltyModel = Backbone.Model.extend({
        defaults: {
            taste: 'salty'
        }
    });
    var SweetyModel = Backbone.Model.extend({
        defaults: {
            taste: 'sweet'
        }
    });
    var BoringModel = Backbone.Model.extend({
        defaults: {
            taste: null
        }
    });
 
    // Set up a collection
    var Collection = Backbone.Collection.extend({
        model: {
            chosen: {
             // NOTICE this deeper nested attr.
                attr: 'spices.type.names.displayName',
                defaults: BoringModel,
                map: {
                    salt: SaltyModel,
                    sugar: SweetyModel
                }
            }
        }
    });
 
    // Set up the static data
    var flavours = [{
        id: 1,
        spices: {
            type: {
                names: {
                    displayName: 'salt'
                }
            },
            origin: 'belgium'
        }
    }, {
        id: 2,
        spices: {
            type: {
                names: {
                    displayName: 'sugar'
                }
            },
            origin: 'netherlands'
        }
    }, {
        id: 3,
        spices: {
            type: {
                names: {
                    displayName: 'sour'
                }
            },
            origin: 'germany'
        }
    }];
 
    var collection = new Collection(flavours);
 
    // check instances
    collection.get(1) instanceof SaltyModel // true
    collection.get(2) instanceof SweetyModel // true
    collection.get(3) instanceof BoringModel // true
 

Use a function to map models

If the standard mapping isnt enough for you, you can specify your own mapping function

    // Set up some models
    var SaltyModel = Backbone.Model.extend({
        defaults: {
            taste: 'salty'
        }
    });
    var SweetyModel = Backbone.Model.extend({
        defaults: {
            taste: 'sweet'
        }
    });
    var BoringModel = Backbone.Model.extend({
        defaults: {
            taste: null
        }
    });
 
    // Set up a collection
    var Collection = Backbone.Collection.extend({
        model: {
            chosen: function (rawData) {
             if (rawData.spice === 'salt') {
             return SaltyModel;
             }
 
             if (rawData.spice === 'sugar') {
             return SweetyModel;
             }
 
             return BoringModel;   
            }
        }
    });
 
    // Set up the static data
    var flavours = [{
        id: 1,
        spice: 'salt'
    }, {
        id: 2,
        spice: 'sugar'
    }, {
        id: 3,
        spice: 'sour'
    }];
 
    // Init collection with mock data
    var collection = new Collection(flavours);
 
    collection.get(1) instanceof SaltyModel // true
    collection.get(2) instanceof SweetyModel // true
    collection.get(3) instanceof BoringModel // true

Support

Help With Code And Questions

If you're interested in helping with code and questions, please see the issues list and stack overflow tag here, you can also reach me on twitter:

If you have an idea to improve Backbone.Chosen or want to report a bug, please use the issues list.

Compatibility And Requirements

Theses libraries are required for the use, development, testing and documentation of Backbone.Chosen.

Runtime Requirements

Backbone.Chosen currently works with the following versions of these libraries:

  • Backbone v0.9.2
  • Underscore v1.3.3

Backbone.Chosen has not been tested against any other versions of these libraries. You may or may not have success if you use a version other than what it listed here.

Build Tools Used

I use a number of tools to build, test and maintain Backbone.Chosen, including but not limited to:

Grunt

The Grunt project is used to generate the builds for Backbone.Chosen.

QUnit && PhantomJS

Backbone.Chosen is also tested with the QUnit JavaScript test utility, using the PhantomJS runner.

Travis CI

Backbone.Chosen uses Travis CI as a post commit hook, to ensure that it´s tests are passing and assures that the coding guidelines are passed using JSHint

Annotated Source Code

I'm using Docco to generate the annotated source code.

Release Notes (Changlog)

v0.1.1

  • Added: A bunch of tests covering the basic functionality
  • Added: Examples and documentation in the readme
  • Added: A few more inline type tests to check the types of the chosen properties

v0.1.0

  • Initial realease

Legal Foobarbaz (MIT License)

Copyright (c) 2012 Sebastian Golasch, asciidisco

Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:

The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.

THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.

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npm i Backbone.Chosen

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Version

0.1.1

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  • asciidisco