Ember-style computed properties for Backbone models. This is very much a work in progress. Pull requests are welcome!
Grab backbone-computed.min.js from the dist directory and include it on your page.
<script src="backbone-computed.min.js"></script>
Or install through Bower
bower install backbone-computed-properties
Or install through NPM
npm install backbone-computed-properties
You can also use this with Browserify.
var Computed = require('backbone-computed-properties');
Once you do that, you can either use Computed
or Backbone.computed
.
Computed properties let you declare functions as properties. It's super handy for taking one or more normal properties and transforming or manipulating their data to create a new value.
You can achieve computed properties now in Backbone with observers in your model's initialize() method.
Backbone.Model.extend({
initialize: function() {
this.computeHasDiscount();
this.on('change:price change:discountprice', this.computeHasDiscount, this);
// could have more here ...
},
computeHasDiscount: function() { /* implementation */ }
});
In the example above, I have only set up 1 computed property using the base Backbone features. If I had more than 1, the initialize method could get really long and quite messy. Instead of using this approach, I decided to create a computed property library for Backbone with an API like that of Ember's computed properties.
var Person = Backbone.Model.extend({
fullName: Backbone.computed('first', 'last', function() {
return this.get('first') + ' ' + this.get('last');
})
});
var david = new Person({
first: 'David',
last: 'Tang'
});
david.toJSON(); // { first: 'David', last: 'Tang', fullName: 'David Tang' }
david.get('fullName'); // David Tang
david.set({ last: 'Doe' });
david.get('fullName'); // David Doe
david.set({ first: 'David', last: 'Tang' });
david.get('fullName'); // David Tang
You can also set up computed properties that rely on model events using the prefix event:. For example:
Person = Backbone.Model.extend({
syncCount: Backbone.computed('event:sync', function() {
return this.get('syncCount') + 1;
})
});
Computed properties will also trigger custom change events (e.g., fullName
fires change:fullName
).
You can use computed properties as values to create new computed properties. Let's add a username computed property to the previous example, and use the existing fullName computed property:
var Person = Backbone.Model.extend({
fullName: Backbone.computed('first', 'last', function() {
return this.get('first') + ' ' + this.get('last');
}),
username: Backbone.computed('fullName', function() {
return this.get('fullName').replace(/\s/g, '').toLowerCase();
})
});
var david = new Person({
first: 'David',
last: 'Tang'
});
david.get('username'); // davidtang
david.set({ last: 'Doe' });
david.get('username')); // daviddoe
Creates a new property that is an alias for another property on an object.
var Person = Backbone.Model.extend({
age: Backbone.computed.alias('theage')
});
var person = new Person({
theage: 66
});
person.get('age'); //66
A computed property that returns true if the provided dependent property is equal to the given value.
var Person = Backbone.Model.extend({
napTime: Backbone.computed.equal('state', 'sleepy')
});
var person = new Person({
state: 'sleepy'
});
person.get('napTime'); // true
person.set('state', 'hungry');
person.get('napTime'); // false
Unit tests are written using Mocha, Chai, and Sinon. Install karma and bower and then start karma.
npm install -g bower
npm install -g karma
npm install -g browserify
bower install
npm install
karma start
The build process will create a minified version and place it in the dist directory.
gulp