If you have any questions please contact me @dnagir.
This provides a set of conveniences for you to use more like Backbone or Spine, but still fully leveraging KnockoutJS.
Add it to your Rails application's Gemfile
:
gem 'knockout-rails'
Then bundle install
.
Reference knockout
from your JavaScript as you normally do with Rails 3.1 Assets Pipeline.
After you've referenced the knockout
you can create your first persistent Model.
class @Page extends ko.Model
@persistAt 'page' # This is enough to save the model RESTfully to `/pages/{id}` URL
@fields 'id', 'name', 'whatever' # This is optional and will be inferred if not used
Too simple. This model conforms to the response of inherited_resources Gem.
Now you can create the model in your HTML. Note that we don't do a roundtrip to fetch the data as we already have it when rendering the view.
= content_for :script do
:javascript
jQuery(function(){
// Create the viewModel with prefilled data
window.page = new Page(#{@page.to_json});
ko.applyBindings(window.page); // And bind everything
});
Of course you can manipulate the object as you wish:
page.name 'Updated page'
page.save() # saves it to the server using PUT: /pages/123
page.name '' # Assign an invalid value that is validated on the server
request = page.save() # returns the jQuery Deferred, so you can chain into it when necessary
request.always (xhr, status) ->
# The response is 422 with JSON: {name: ["invalid name", "should not be blank"]}
# And now we have the errors set automatically!
page.errors.name() # "invalid name, should not be blank"
# even more than that, errors are already bound and shown in the HTML (see the view below)
Now let's see how we can show the validation errors on the page and bind everything together.
%form.page.formtastic{:data => {:bind =>'submit: save'}}
%fieldset
%ol
%li.input.string
%label.label{:for=>:page_name} Name
%input#page_name{:type=>:text, :data=>{:bind=>'value: name'}}
%span.inline-error{:data=>{:bind=>'visible: errors.name, text: errors.name'}}
If you are using the model, you can also take advantage of the client-side validation framework.
The client side validation works similarly to the server-side validation. This means there is only one place to check for errors, no matter where those are defined.
For example - page.errors.name()
returns the error message for the name
field for both client and server side validations.
The piece of code below should explain client-side validation, including some of the options.
class @Page extends ko.Model
@persistAt 'page'
@validates: ->
@acceptance 'agree_to_terms' # Value is truthy
@presence 'name', 'body' # Non-empty, non-blank stringish value
@email 'author' # Valid email, blanks allowed
@presence 'password'
@confirmation 'passwordConfirmation', {confirms: 'password'} # Blanks allowed
# numericality:
@numericality 'rating'
@numericality 'rating', min: 1, max: 5
# Inclusion/exclusion
@inclusion 'subdomain', values: ["mine", "yours"]
@exclusion 'subdomain', values: ["www", "www2"]
@format 'code', match: /\d+/ # Regex validation, blanks allowed
@length 'name', min: 3, max: 10 # Stringish value should be with the range
# Custom message
@presence 'name', message: 'give me a name, yo!'
# Conditional validation - access model using `this`
@presence 'name', only: -> @persisted(), except: -> @id() > 5
# Custom inline validation
@custom 'name', (page) ->
if (page.name() || '').indexOf('funky') < 0 then "should be funky" else null
It is recommended to avoid custom inline validations and create your own validators instead (and maybe submit it as a Pull Request):
ko.Validations.validators.funky = (model, field, options) ->
# options - is an optional set of options passed to the validator
word = options.word || 'funky'
if model[field]().indexOf(word) < 0 "should be #{word}" else null
so that you can use it like so:
@validates: ->
funky 'name', word: 'yakk'
Here's how you would check whether the model is valid or not (assuming presence validation on name
field):
page = new @Page name: ''
page.isValid() # false
page.errors.name() # "can't be blank"
page.name = 'Home'
page.isValid() # true
page.errors.name() # null
Every validator has its own set of options. But the following are applied to all of them (including yours):
only: -> truthy or falsy
- only apply the validation when the condition is truthy. this
points to the model so you can access it.except:
- is the opposite to only. Both only
and except
can be used, but you should make sure those are not mutually exclusive.And at the end of this exercise, you can bind the errors using data-bind="text: page.error.name"
or any other technique.
class @Page extends ko.Model
@persistAt 'page'
# Subscribe to 'sayHi' event
@upon 'sayHi', (name) ->
alert name + @name
page = Page.new name: 'Home'
page.trigger 'sayHi', 'Hi '
# will show "Hi Home"
The callbacks are just convenience wrappers over the predefined events. Some of them are:
class @Page extends ko.Model
@persistAt 'page'
@beforeSave ->
@age = @birthdate - new Date()
# This would be similar to
class @Page extends ko.Model
@persistAt 'page'
@on 'beforeSave', ->
@age = @birthdate - new Date()
This gem also includes useful bindings that you may find useful in your application.
For example, you can use autosave
binding by requiring knockout/bindings/autosave
.
Or if you want to include all of the bindings available, then require knockout/bindings/all
.
The list of currently available bindings:
autosave
- automatically persists the model whenever any of its attributes change.
Apply it to a form
element. Examples: autosave: page
, autosave: {model: page, when: page.isEnabled, unless: viewModel.doNotSave }
. NOTE: It will not save when a model is not valid.inplace
- converts the input elements into inplace editing with 'Edit'/'Done' buttons. Apply it on input
elements similarly to the value
binding.color
- converts an element into a color picker. Apply it to a div
element: color: page.fontColor
. Depends on pakunok gem (specifically - its colorpicker
asset).onoff
- Converts checkboxes into iOS on/off buttons. Example: onoff: page.isPublic
. It depends on ios-chechboxes gem.animate
- runs the animation when dependent attributes change. Example: animate: {width: quotaUsed, height: quotaUsed(), duration: 2000}
.autocomplete
- supports jQuery UI autocomplete. Example: autocomplete: {source: arrayOrObservableOrAnyObjectOrDeferred, select: observableToSetTheValueTo, label: 'nameOfTheFieldToDisplay'}
. The source
can support jQuery.Deferred
meaning that you can simply return the result of a jQuery.ajax
.Please see the specs for more detailed instruction on how to use the specific binding.
HISTORY.md
file for current TODO list and other details.Assuming you already cloned the repo in cd-d into it:
bundle install
# Now run the Ruby specs
bundle exec rspec spec/
# Now start JavaScript server for specs:
cd spec/dummy
bundle exec rails s
# go to http://localhost:3000/jasmine to see the results
Now you can go to spec/javascripts
and start writing your specs and then modify stuff in lib/assets/javascripts
to pass those.
Pull requests are very welcome, but please include the specs! It's extremely easy to write those!