This addon is not maintained
In recent Ember versions, you problem don't need an addon for this case. With the introduction of helper functions, you can just easily create a local helper that checks if an element is contained in an array.
If you want the helper to react to add/removals, you should be using some version of a "reactive" array. Either EmberArray
or TrackedArray
from tracked-built-ins. See demo here.
In any case, this addon should be compatible with basically every ember version from 3.28 to 5.x.
Ember template helper allowing to test if an array contains a particular element.
This helper allows to test the presence of a literal, a full object or a specific property/value of an object inside a given array. Objects can be native or Ember objects.
- This helper is tested against Ember 3.28+
Before its version 2.x, this addon came with a polyfill (ember-runtime-enumerable-includes-polyfill
) emulating the native EcmaScript method includes
in case you wanted to run it within an environment that did not support this method.
Since its version 2.x, the polyfill is not included by default and this addon relies on the fact that it is run in an environment supporting the includes
method.
Errors will occur if it is not the case.
If you want to use this addon in an older browser or environment that does not support includes
, you must then now explicitely add the polyfill as a regular dependency: yarn add ember-runtime-enumerable-includes-polyfill
.
ember install ember-array-contains-helper
Where:
<array>
is the array to search into. Should be a valid not null array.<value>
is the value which is supposed to be contained in the arrray. Could be an object or a literal, null or undefined.<property>
is an option: if set, the search is done on the presence of an object containing a property<property>
with the value<value>
. If not, the search is done of the presence of the full<value>
(object or literal)
This helper could be:
- used standalone:
- or, more often, combined with the
if
helper:
Depending on the given parameters, the test is made on
- the presence of a literal:
// routes/application.js
import Route from '@ember/routing/route';
export default class ApplicationRoute extends Route {
model() {
return ['Akira', 'Blacksad', 'CalvinAndHobbes'];
}
}
- the presence of the object itself:
// routes/application.js
import Route from '@ember/routing/route';
import Comic from '../models/comic';
let blackSad = Comic.create({
title: 'Blacksad',
});
let calvinAndHobbes = Comic.create({
title: 'Calvin and Hobbes',
});
let akira = Comic.create({
title: 'Akira',
});
export default class ApplicationRoute extends Route {
model() {
return [akira, blacksad, calvinAndHobbes];
}
setupController(controller) {
super.setupController(...arguments);
controller.calvinAndHobbes = calvinAndHobbes;
}
}
- the presence of an object containing a specific property with a specific value using the option
property
:
// routes/application.js
import Route from '@ember/routing/route';
import { inject as service } from '@ember/service';
export default class ApplicationRoute extends Route {
@service store;
model() {
return this.store.findAll('comic');
}
}
null
and undefined
are considered acceptable values for 'value' parameter.
-
until ember 2.9,
null
andundefined
are both coerced tonull
by the templating engine. The following expressions are therefore both leading to check for the presence of anull
value inside the array: -
ember 2.10 (glimmer) changed this behaviour.
undefined
are then preserved and not coerced tonull
anymore.
It could eventually break some apps relying on the initial behaviour but it has been considered as a fix since the first behaviour was accidental. See this issue for details.
git clone https://github.com/bmeurant/ember-array-contains-helper
cd ember-array-contains-helper
npm install
npm install
ember server
- Visit your app at http://localhost:4200.
npm run lint:js
npm run lint:js -- --fix
ember test
– Runs the test suite on the current Ember versionember test --server
– Runs the test suite in "watch mode"npm test
– Runsember try:each
to test your addon against multiple Ember versions
ember build
This addon uses YUIDoc via ember-cli-yuidoc. yuidoc-ember-cli-theme makes it pretty.
Docs generation is enabled in development mode via ember build
or ember serve
with or without --docs auto refresh option. It can also be explicitely generated with ember ember-cli-yuidoc
command.
For more information on using ember-cli, visit https://www.ember-cli.com/.