I'm really struggling to understand the routing concept in Ember but is more complicate than what it seem. From the doc. you can see you have different route whenever there is different url or path and if you have different path in the same url, easy you just need to create a nested template.
But what about when you have 3 different path in one url?
And what's the difference from this.resource and this.route?
Since live example are always better than pure theory, here my app.
In index or '/' I should render "list template", "new template" and when user click on a list link, the "note template" is render instead "new template".
My router:
Notes.Router.map(function () {
this.resource('index', { path: '/' }, function (){
this.resource('list', {path: ':note_title'});
this.resource('new', {path: '/'});
this.resource('note', { path: ':note_id' });
});
});
My template:
<script type="text/x-handlebars" data-template-name="index">
<div class="wrap">
<div class="bar">
{{input type="text" class="search" placeholder="Where is my bookmark??" value=search action="query"}}
<div class="bar-buttons">
<button {{action "addNote"}}> NEW </button>
</div>
</div>
{{outlet}}
</div>
</script>
<script type="text/x-handlebars" data-template-name="list">
<aside>
<h4 class="all-notes">All Notes {{length}}</h4>
{{#each item in model}}
<li>
{{#link-to 'note' item}} {{item.title}} {{/link-to}}
</li>
{{/each}}
</aside>
</script>
<script type="text/x-handlebars" data-template-name="new">
<section>
<div class="note">
{{input type="text" placeholder="Title" value=newTitle action="createNote"}}
<div class="error" id="error" style="display:none"> Fill in the Title! </div>
{{input type="text" placeholder="What you need to remember?" value=newBody action="createNote"}}
{{input type="text" placeholder="Url:" value=newUrl action="createNote"}}
</div>
</section>
</script>
<script type="text/x-handlebars" data-template-name="note">
<section>
<div class="note">
{{#if isEditing}}
<h2 class="note-title input-title"> {{edit-input-note value=title focus-out="modified" insert-newline="modified"}} </h2>
<p class="input-body"> {{edit-area-note value=body focus-out="modified" insert-newline="modified"}} </p>
{{edit-input-note value=url focus-out="modified" insert-newline="modified"}}
{{else}}
<h2 {{action "editNote" on="doubleClick"}} class="note-title" > {{title}} </h2>
<button {{action "removeNote"}} class="delete"> Delete </button>
<p {{action "editNote" on="doubleClick"}}> {{body}} </p>
{{input type="text" placeholder="URL:" class="input" value=url }}
{{/if}}
</div>
</section>
</script>
Or here the Js Bin: http://jsbin.com/oWeLuvo/1/edit?html,js,output
If my controllers or model are needed I will add that code as well.
thanks in advance
Your example seems to be working.
You just miss dependencies. You haven't included Handlebars and Ember.data
If you'd have checked your javascript console, you'd have seen the error thrown.
working example: http://jsbin.com/oWeLuvo/2/
In Ember a resource and a route are both routes. They have two names in order for Ember to differentiate between what is a resource and a route. In all honesty to remember that they are both routes and to keep your sanity you could refer to them respectively as a 'resource route' and a 'route'. A resource can be nested and have children resources or routes nested within them. Routes on the other hand cannot have nested anything.
Install the Ember Inspector if you are not already using it. It is a chrome extension and will help you with routes, controllers, templates, data and alot of other things with Ember, that you install into the Chrome Web Browser. The last that I heard the Ember Inspector is available in the FireFox Dev Tools as well. https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/ember-inspector/bmdblncegkenkacieihfhpjfppoconhi?hl=en
So if have a resource, you can nest a resource, and a route. The nested resources will preserve their name space, routes will get appended to nested name space. Remember you can not nest anything within a route.
App.Router.map(function() {
//creating a resource
this.resource('foo', {path: 'somePathYouPut'}, function() {
//nesting stuff inside of the resource above
//could open another nest level here in bar if you want
this.resource('bar');
//can not nest in route. Sad face. Sorry
this.route('zoo');
});
});
Since you can not nest anything into a route your {{outlet}} in the index template does not have any children to look for and by default and render into that {{outlet}}. I believe that is what you think is going to happen.
<script type="text/x-handlebars" data-template-name="index">
<div class="wrap">
<div class="bar">
{{input type="text" class="search"
placeholder="Where is my bookmark??" value=search action="query"}}
<div class="bar-buttons">
<button {{action "addNote"}}> NEW </button>
</div>
</div>
{{outlet}}
</div>
</script>
In your code you referred to the index as a resource, its a route. Since the index is a route, remember you can not nest elements within a route, your code should have looked more like this. Also your resource 'new' path / can be removed as well.
Notes.Router.map(function () {
//this is a route not a resource you had it as resource
//and tried to nest in your code
this.route('index', { path: '/' });
this.resource('list', {path: ':note_title'});
this.resource('new');
this.resource('note', { path: ':note_id' });
});
You get an index at each nested level starting with the top most level which comes from the application level but you don't have to explicitly define them in the Router they are just there. The index route that you get for free at each nested level is associated with its immediate parent by default and render into its parents 'outlet' by default. You could think of the Router looking something like this.
For Illustrative purposes only:
Notes.Router.map(function() {
//think of this as your application level stuff that Ember just does!!
//this is not written like this but to illustrate what is going on
//you would get application template, ApplicationRoute, ApplicationController
this.resource('application', function() {
//this is an index that you get for free cause its nested
//its that index template, IndexController, and IndexRoute you were using
this.route('index', { path: '/' });
this.resource('foo', {path: 'somePathYouPutHere' }, function() {
//since you started another nested level surprise you get another `index`
//but this one is `foo/index` template.
this.route('index', {path: '/'});
this.route('zoo');
});
});
});
The first part of the above exaggerated router example, Ember does automatically behind the scenes, its part of the 'magic' you hear about. It does two things it sets up an Application environment for its self and you get ApplicationRoute, ApplicationController, and a application template which are always there behind the scene. Second it makes that index and you get IndexController, IndexRoute, and a index template that you can use or ignore. So if you do nothing else, no other code that declaring and Ember App in a file like var App = Ember.Application.create(); and open the Ember Inspector and look into routes you will see the above mentioned assets.
Now, the resource foo in the above router is an example of a resource you would make and as you see you get an index in there because you started to nest. As mentioned above you do not have to define the index at each nest level, this.route('index', {path: '/'}); from inside foo could be totally omitted and Ember will still do the same thing. You will end up with foo/index template, FooIndexRoute, FooIndexController along with the expected foo template, FooRoute, and FooController. You can think of thefooindex as a place that says 'hey' before anything else gets rolled into my parentfoo` and gets rendered I can show something if you want, use me.
This is also a good time to highlight what happens with namespace when you nest route in a resource like this.route('zoo') in the above example. The namespace of the route zoo is now going to be appended to resource foo and you end up with foo/zoo template, FooZooRoute and a FooZooController.
If you were to change zoo to a resource nested in the foo resource this.resource('zoo'); the namespace will be keep for zoo. You will end up with 'zoo' template, ZooRoute and a ZooController. The namespace is kept. Ok, enough side tracking what about your App.
You said that you wanted / url of your app to render the list template. In order to accomplish that you have to override the default behavior that happens when Ember boots up. You override the top level / by adding the {path: '/'} to the first resource or route in the Router. From the fake router code above the first index route you get is associate with the application. By default if you do nothing Ember will push that index template into the application template. However that is not what you want you want your list template to be pushed into the application template when you hit the base url of /' for your App.
Notes.Router.map(function() {
this.resource('list', {path: '/'});
this.resource('new');
this.resource('note', { path: ':note_id' });
});
By adding the code {path: '/'} to the first resource like I did above, you are now telling Ember 'hey' when my app url reaches the base url of / or when you boot up use my list template not your default index template and render that into the application template. In addition since the other resources are not nested when your App transitions to those routes via the url they will blow out whats in the application template {{outlet}} and replace themselves in there.
You mentioned about defining a "path" in a route what that does is tell Ember how you want to represent that route in the url. In the above example if you leave the new resource as is, Ember by default will use the routes name as the path, the url would be /new. You can put any name in path for the new resource, this.resource(new, {path :'emberMakesMeKingOfWorld'}); and that name will be represented in the url as /emberMakesMeKingOfWorld and that long thing will still be associated with you new route. Your user might be confused what this url means but behind the scence you would know its tied to your new route. Its just an example but probably good practice to use descriptive names so your user knows what hitting a url in your App is meant to do.
After overriding the default index template that is associated with the application. I moved your code into the application template. The reason for that it seemed as though you wanted that bar with the 'newNote' action to be present all the time. If you want something present all the time in your App, like a navigation bar, footer, im sure you can think of better stuff, place it in the application template.
Here is a JSBIN and I adjusted you code a little
http://jsbin.com/oWeLuvo/8
I hope this helps Happy Coding.
Related
I am creating one ember app.
Flow is like " page1 displays list of feeds item and clicking on any of the feed will take user to page2 showing details about that feed"
What i am doing:
i have one component named app-feed. Template is as below
<div onclick={{action 'click' feed}}>
{{#paper-card class="card-small" as |card|}}
<!-- --> {{card.image src=feed.imagePath class="small-feed-img" alt=feed.title}}<!---->
{{#card.header class="flex-box short-padding" as |header|}}
{{#header.avatar}}
<img class="profile-small" src="http://app.com/users/{{feed.userName}}.jpg" alt="{{feed.name}}" />
{{/header.avatar}}
<span class="tag-sm like-box">
{{feed.likes}} {{paper-icon "thumb_up" size="18"}}
{{feed.commentCount}}{{paper-icon "chat_bubble" size="18"}}
</span>
{{/card.header}}
{{#card.actions class="action-block"}}
{{#paper-button iconButton=true}}{{paper-icon "favorite" size="18"}}{{/paper-button}}
{{#paper-button iconButton=true}}{{paper-icon "share" size="18"}}{{/paper-button}}
{{#paper-button iconButton=true}}{{paper-icon "shopping_basket" size="18"}}{{/paper-button}}
{{/card.actions}}
{{/paper-card}}
</div>
component.js is as below
import Ember from 'ember';
export default Ember.Component.extend({
actions:{
click(feed){
console.log("Click event fired:"+feed.id); //Output is correct in console
this.sendAction("onClick", feed); //sending onClick Action
}
}
});
I'm populating list of this component in one of my route.
Template is as below
{{#app-sidenav user=model}}{{/app-sidenav}}
<div class="content">
<div class="row">
{{#each model as |item|}}
{{#app-feed-small onClick=(action "getDetail" item) class="col-xs-5" feed=item}} {{/app-feed-small}}
{{/each}}
</div>
</div>
route.js is as below
import Ember from 'ember';
export default Ember.Route.extend({
store: Ember.inject.service(),
model(){
//Populating module. Works just fine
} ,
actions:{
getDetails(feed){
console.log("Getting details of "+feed.id);
}
}
});
I have defined getDetails action as mentioned in my template.js of the route still i am getting below error
""Assertion Failed: An action named 'getDetail' was not found in (generated feed.index controller)""
feed.index is my route.
I used same method and modified paper-chip's source to get action corresponding to click on paper-chip's item which worked. But i am not able to do same in my own component.
Please let me know what is missing
Your problem is that in your second last code snippet, the one with your template. You refer to the action as getDetail but in route.js your last code snippet you declare the action as getDetails which is different to the code in your template. It's a common spelling error, one has an "s" st the end whereas the other doesn't.
The actions should be in controllers. And if controller bubbles up then the action in route be called.
For your case you don't need controller.
You can use ember-transition-helper
I assume you have in router.js :
this.route('feeds', function(){
this.route('edit', {path: '/:id'});
});
Now your template is going to be :
{#app-sidenav user=model}}{{/app-sidenav}}
<div class="content">
<div class="row">
{{#each model as |item|}}
{{#app-feed-small onClick=(transition-to "feeds.edit" item) class="col-xs-5" feed=item}} {{/app-feed-small}}
{{/each}}
</div>
</div>
sendAction is an ancient way to calling action inside controller/route.
The new style is to use closure action, which passes action as a value by creating a closure at the time of value passing.
Yes, you are correct. The action has been sendAction is able to bubble up from,
correspond controller -> correspond route -> upper route -> ... -> application route
However, closure action does NOT bubble.
Please refer to Ember component send action to route where #kumkanillam detailed explained how to call action inside route using different method and the differences between sendAction and closure action.
I have also made a sample project and write a simple explanation for it at,
https://github.com/li-xinyang/FE_Ember_Closure_Action
I have a mapping app that has a full-screen map with a sidebar for information. This app has two routes:
one route that should display a list of places with markers on the map, for example /places/
one route that should display a single place with that particular place's marker centered on the map, for example places/1/
My map is currently a Component that is in application.hbs, so it is "outside" of the route templates and persists across route changes. It looks something like:
<div class="page">
<aside class="sidebar">
{{outlet}}
</aside>
<div class="content">
{{places-map ... }}
</div>
</div>
and my routes looks something like:
Router.map(function() {
this.route('index', { path: '/' });
this.route('place', { path: "/place/:place_id" });
this.route('places');
});
So while I have all this set up and working (I can see a list of places and move a single particular place, in both cases with the map in the "background"), I can't understand how my routes can feed information to my component or simply how my routes can communicate with the component that is sitting "outside" of their context?
Is this a possible pattern with Ember and is there a way to achieve it?
Ditto on what #GerDner said about data-down-actions-up.
Starting from the top:
application/controller.js
import Ember from 'ember';
export default Ember.Controller.extend({
somethingDownFromController: null
});
application/route.js
import Ember from 'ember';
const {
set
} = Ember;
export default Ember.Route.extend({
actions: {
sendSomethingUp(something) {
set(this.controllerFor('application'), 'somethingDownFromController', something);
}
}
});
application/template.hbs
<div class="page">
<aside class="sidebar">
{{outlet}}
</aside>
<div class="content">
{{places-map
something=somethingDownFromController
}}
</div>
</div>
place/route.js
import Ember from 'ember';
export default Ember.Route.extend({
model() {
return {
somethingFromNestedRoute: 'boooooyaaaaah'
}
}
});
place/template.hbs
<button {{action 'sendSomethingUp' model.somethingFromNestedRoute}}>
Send model up
</button>
You might not need to send anything up with the action you're bubbling here. If that's the case then you can just grab what you need from the application controller or route and pass it down into places-map.
places-map/template.hbs
Insert something from the outer context:
<div>{{something}}</div>
Here's an ember-twiddle. I made a few notes in the router.js file that might be useful depending on the exact needs of your application.
The data-down/actions-up Pattern is the answer.
http://www.samselikoff.com/blog/data-down-actions-up/
You hold the data on a toplevel component/controller and pass the data down to child components. Data changes are triggered via actions on the child component and handled by the toplevel component/controller via action bubbling. So you need only one component/controller which knows how to change the data and how to get data.
I was following this Ember tutorial and this quickly got a lot more complicated. This was the tutorial that I was following.
I am lost as to what is going on. When is the index.hbs getting loaded and why? Here is my code starting with the router.js:
import Ember from 'ember';
import config from './config/environment';
var Router = Ember.Router.extend({
location: config.locationType
});
Router.map(function() {
this.route('todos', { path: '/'}, function() {
this.route('complete');
this.route('incomplete');
});
});
export default Router;
So it looks like our home url will load the todos.js route right? This is my code:
import Ember from 'ember';
export default Ember.Route.extend({
model() {
let todos = [
{
title: 'Learn Ember',
complete: false,
},
{
title: 'Solve World Hunger',
complete: false,
}
];
return todos;
}
});
So this todos.js route is my model right?
I assume ember also loads the todos.hbs template by default? Is that right? Or does it load the app/templates/todos/index.hbs? Which one does it load?
This is my app/templates/todos.hbs code:
<input type="text" id="new-todo" placeholder="What needs to be done?" />
{{#todo-list todos=model}}
{{outlet}}
{{/todo-list}}
This is my app/templates/todos/index.hbs code:
<ul id="todo-list">
{{#each model as |todo|}}
<!-- this loads the component todo-item and passes in a todo as todo -->
{{todo-item todo=todo}}
{{/each}}
</ul>
The tutorial doesn't really explain what is going on here. If the index.hbs gets loaded, does it then load the todo-item component template? If so, this is my app/templates/components/todo-item.hbs:
<input type="checkbox" class="toggle" checked="{{if todo.complete 'checked'}}">
<label class="{{if todo.complete 'completed'}}">{{todo.title}}</label><button class="destroy"></button>
In the event that the app/templates/todos.hbs gets loaded...What is going on in the app/templates/todos.hbs? Are we passing in the model (somehow accessible in the template?) as todos to the todo-list component? Here is the app/templates/components/todo-list.hbs
<section id="main">
{{yield}}
<input type="checkbox" id="toggle-all">
</section>
<footer id="footer">
<span id="todo-count">
<strong>2</strong> todos left
</span>
<ul id="filters">
<li>
All
</li>
<li>
Active
</li>
<li>
Completed
</li>
</ul>
<button id="clear-completed">
Clear completed (1)
</button>
</footer>
Welcome to the wonderful world of Emberjs! first of all, I recommend you to visit the official page of Emberjs. Can you see the sidebar menu? well, be ready to spend some time reading it if you want to understand how Emberjs works. I strongly recommend you to read at least Router, Template, Component and Controller sections to begin with.
Let's see some of the snippets you have provided:
Router.map(function() {
this.route('todos', { path: '/'}, function() {
this.route('complete');
this.route('incomplete');
});
});
This is where you define your routes. Here what you have is the main route called 'todos' but used as the root page (starting at /). After it, there are two more routes: /complete and /incomplete.
model() {
let todos = [
{
title: 'Learn Ember',
complete: false,
},
{
title: 'Solve World Hunger',
complete: false,
}
];
return todos;
}
Here you are defining a model in one route (I assume is the route of todos). Pretty straight, isn't it? if you were using Ember Data for example. you would ask the server for the model here and the route would wait until receive the response.
The reason why you have an index template and a todos template is simple: todos.hbs will contain the {{outlet}} in which every page will be rendered. Imagine it as a wrapper. Whatever comes after / will be wrapped by this todos.hbs, even the index.hbs. You have more info here, in the guides (reason why I recommend you to read it first).
Let's move to another snippet:
{{#todo-list todos=model}}
{{outlet}}
{{/todo-list}}
Here you are using a component to wrap whatever is rendered in the {{outlet}}. You haven't pasted it here, but it should contain in its template at least a {{yield}} to specify where the {{outlet}} will be rendered. That info about {{yield}} can be found here.
Let's move to the next part:
ul id="todo-list">
{{#each model as |todo|}}
<!-- this loads the component todo-item and passes in a todo as todo -->
{{todo-item todo=todo}}
{{/each}}
</ul>
This {{#each}} handlebar, expressed in a block way (that's why it uses the # at the beginning and the / at the end), is a loop that allows you work with each item of your model, defined as todo. What you are doing here is to provide the component todo-item with one item of the model. If your model has 3 todos, todo-item will be rendered 3 times, one for each of them.
Again, I recommend you to follow that tutorial having the emberjs guides opened and whenever you have a doubt, check the guides until you understand the concept and then, move to the next step.
<script type="text/x-handlebars">
<div class="wrapper">
<div class="sideMenu">
{{#link-to 'home'}}Home{{/link-to}}
{{#link-to 'posts'}}Posts{{/link-to}}
</div>
<div class="content">
{{outlet}}
</div>
</div>
</script>
I am new to ember js. How can I add a class on 'content' class each time when view changes.
We do something like this:
Ember.Route.reopen({
activate: function() {
var cssClass = this.toCssClass();
// you probably don't need the application class
// to be added to the body
if (cssClass !== 'application') {
Ember.$('body').addClass(cssClass);
}
},
deactivate: function() {
Ember.$('body').removeClass(this.toCssClass());
},
toCssClass: function() {
return this.routeName.replace(/\./g, '-').dasherize();
}
});
It would add a class to the body (in your case just use content), that is the same as the current route.
#torazaburo had some excellent points about #Asgaroth (accepted) answer, but I liked the idea of not having to write this same functionality over and over again. So, what I am providing below is a hybrid of the two solutions plus my own two cents and I believe it addresses #torazaburo concerns regarding the accepted answer.
Let's start with the 2nd point:
I also don't like the idea of polluting Ember.Route
Can you pollute Ember.Route without polluting Ember.Route? (Huh?) Absolutely! :) Instead of overwriting activate, we can write our own function and tell it to run .on(activate) This way, our logic is run, but we are not messing with the built-in/inherited activate hook.
The accepted answer is very procedural, imperative, jQuery-ish, and un-Ember-like.
I have to agree with this as well. In the accepted answer, we are abandoning Ember's data binding approach and instead fall back on the jQuery. Not only that, we then have to have more code in the deactivate to "clean up the mess".
So, here is my approach:
Ember.Route.reopen({
setContentClass: function(){
this.controllerFor('application').set("path", this.routeName.dasherize());
}.on('activate')
});
We add our own method to the Ember.Route class without overwriting activate hook. All the method is doing is setting a path property on the application controller.
Then, inside application template, we can bind to that property:
<div {{bind-attr class=":content path"}}>
{{outlet}}
</div>
Working solution here
Just bind the currentPath property on the application controller to the class of the element in the template:
<div {{bind-attr class=":content currentPath"}}>
{{outlet}}
</div>
In case you're not familiar with the {{bind-attr class= syntax in Ember/Handlebars:
the class name preceded with a colon (:content) is always added to the element
properties such as currentPath result in the current value of that property being inserted as a class, and are kept dynamically updated
To be able to access currentPath in a template being driven by a controller other than the application controller, first add
needs: ['application']
to the controller, which makes the application controller available under the name controllers.application, for use in the bind-attr as follows:
<div {{bind-attr class=":content controllers.application.currentPath"}}>
You may use currentRouteName instead of or in addition to currentPath if that works better for you.
The class name added will be dotted, such as uploads.index. You can refer to that in your CSS by escaping the dot, as in
.uploads\.index { }
Or, if you would prefer dasherized, add a property to give the dasherized path, such as
dasherizedCurrentPath: function() {
return this.('currentPath').replace(/\./g, '-');
}.property('currentPath')
<div {{bind-attr class=":content dasherizedCurrentPath"}}>
This has been tested in recent versions of ember-cli.
I have a very simple CRUD application that allows for creating new objects as well as editing them.
The template used for adding a record and editing a record are almost identical.
They use the exact same form elements.
The only difference is the title and the button below the form (that should either update or create a record)
In my implementation, I have
2 route definitions
2 route objects
2 controller objects
2 templates
I was wondering if
I can't promote re-use here
if all of these objects are required.
What bothers me :
I have 2 separate templates for create and edit (while they are almost identical)
I have 2 separate controllers that do exactly the same thing.
I was hoping to solve this on the controller level.
As a controller decorates a model, in my case 1 single controller object could wrap either a new record or an existing record.
It could then expose a property (isNewObject) so that the template can decide if we are in the "new" or "edit" flow. The controller could have a single createOrUpdate method that works both in the new and in the update scenario.
Routes
The current implementation is using a new and an edit route for my resource.
this.resource("locations", function(){
this.route("new", {path:"/new"});
this.route("edit", {path: "/:location_id" });
});
The new route
The new route is responsible for creating a new record and is called when the user navigates to the new record screen.
App.LocationsNewRoute = Ember.Route.extend({
model: function() {
return App.Location.createRecord();
}
});
The edit route
The edit route is responsible for editing an existing object when the user clicks the edit button in the overview screen.
I haven't extended the default edit route but instead I'm using the auto generated one.
Controllers
The new and edit controllers are responsible for handling the action that occurs in the template (either saving or updating a record)
The only thing both controllers do is commit the transaction.
Note: I guess this is a candidate for re-use, but how can I use a single controller for driving 2 different routes / templates ?
App.LocationsNewController = Ember.ObjectController.extend({
addItem: function(location) {
location.transaction.commit();
this.get("target").transitionTo("locations");
}
});
App.LocationsEditController = Ember.ObjectController.extend({
updateItem: function(location) {
location.transaction.commit();
this.get("target").transitionTo("locations");
}
});
Templates :
As you can see, the only code-reuse I have here is the partial (the model field binding).
I still have 2 controllers (new and edit) and 2 templates.
The new templates sets the correct title / button and re-uses the form partial.
<script type="text/x-handlebars" data-template-name="locations/new" >
<h1>New location</h1>
{{partial "locationForm"}}
<p><button {{action addItem this}}>Add record</button></p>
</script>
The edit templates sets the correct title / button and re-uses the form partial.
<script type="text/x-handlebars" data-template-name="locations/edit" >
<h1>Edit location</h1>
{{partial "locationForm"}}
<p><button {{action updateItem this}}>Update record</button></p>
</script>
The partial
<script type="text/x-handlebars" data-template-name="_locationForm" >
<form class="form-horizontal">
<div class="control-group">
<label class="control-label" for="latitude">Latitude</label>
<div class="controls">
{{view Ember.TextField valueBinding="latitude"}}
</div>
</div>
<div class="control-group">
<label class="control-label" for="latitude">Longitude</label>
<div class="controls">
{{view Ember.TextField valueBinding="longitude"}}
</div>
</div>
<div class="control-group">
<label class="control-label" for="accuracy">Accuracy</label>
<div class="controls">
{{view Ember.TextField valueBinding="accuracy"}}
</div>
</div>
</form>
</script>
Note: I would expect that I can do something efficient/smarter here.
I would want my template to look this this : (getting the title from the controller, and have a single action that handles both the update and the create)
<script type="text/x-handlebars" data-template-name="locations" >
<h1>{{title}}</h1>
{{partial "locationForm"}}
<p><button {{action createOrUpdateItem this}}>Add record</button></p>
</script>
Question
Can I re-work this code to have more code-reuse, or is it a bad idea to attempt to do this with a single template and a single controller for both the "edit record" and "new record" flows.
If so, how can this be done ? I'm missing the part where my 2 routes (create and edit) would re-use the same controller / template.
You were correct throughout.
And you can use the new controller and template in edit route also.
You have to do only two things.
First give the template name as new in the renderTemplate hook of edit route.
App.LocationsEditRoute = Ember.Route.extend({
setupController: function(controller, model) {
this.controllerFor('locations.new').setProperties({isNew:false,content:model});
},
renderTemplate: function() {
this.render('locations/new')
}
});
As the new template is rendered the controller also will be newController, and you can have the action to point to an event in the newController.
If you want to change the title and button text, you can have them as computed properties observing isNew property.
Hope this helps.
P.S: Don't forget to set the isNew property to true in the setupController of new route
Use this:
App.YourNewRoute = Em.Route.extend ({
controllerName: 'controllerName',
templateName: 'templateName'
});
Only use initial name like for homeController user "home" thats it.
Example:
App.YourNewRoute = Em.Route.extend ({
controllerName: 'home',
templateName: 'home'
});
Now you can use template and controller methods of "home".