Closed robharper closed 10 years ago
@each
is only supported one level deep. It would be nice to allow more, but I don't know how difficult this would be technically. I'll let @wycats or @tomdale chime in on this.
I don't think that's actually true... It uses the normal chain infrastructure and should work arbitrarily many levels deep.
@wycats This sounds like a bug then. I've never seen it work more than one level deep.
Agreed, this sounds like a bug. I believe this was working at some point. Thank you for the unit test.
So I've been puzzling through this. It seems to boil down to EachProxy handling setting up the observers internally when you call addObserver with itself as the root. When as part of a chained path, however, the ChainNode plucks the top-level keyname off of the EachProxy, and goes on its merry way, and the EachProxy never gets involved. Basically, there are two levels of arrays at play.
watching '@each.nest.@each.isDone' DOES work, in this instance.
Forgot to clarify that when the ChainNode plucks the keyname off the EachProxy, it's getting an EachArray, hence the need for nesting the @ each observers.
The way chains work is each chain node has a corresponding chainWatcher that watches the key on the node's parent's value(), in order for this to work the chain needs to stop at @each and setup the chainWatcher with the remaining path.
I'm considering special casing @ character to just mean this.
@kselden, does your simplify-properties
branch touch on this at all?
Looks like this is still an issue.
chains do not chain through properties that produce arrays, this requires some changes I stated above, no I haven't done any work on it. It also is problematic @each itself changes when the array does.
I've hacked around this, for anyone that is facing this issue (especially when using ember-data associations), by adding a property on one side of the association that checks the property in the other end of the association (in my case, isLoaded) and then using that after the @each
. As I said, this is a hack. But until 1.1, it works for me.
@tpitale: could you show an example of such hack? I'm not sure what you mean by adding a property on other side of association.
@kselden @wagenet: I encountered something similar recently, but frankly I'm not sure if this is the same bug, could you take a look at this fiddle: http://jsfiddle.net/uErrd/4/ ?
@drogus given the original example, there would be a nestIsDone property for the path nest.isDone. So you could observe @each.nestIsDone
.
would really love to see this in 1.0 not 1.1 :+1:
@mspisars Me too, but I don't want to block 1.0 on things that are difficult to fix and non-essential.
last activity 4 months ago ... :+1:
@mspisars, @darthdeus I would love to see it in 1.0 too. The issue is not about desire, it's about ability.
:+1: for 1.0: would be really useful to have this working.
:+1: for 1.0
Public Service Announcement: +1s do not provide development resources where they are lacking.
We've already agreed that we'd love to have this feature but it's very much non-trivial to support. It's certainly not something we'll block 1.0 on.
Agreed with @wagenet these are non-trivial code paths that touch mission critical parts of ember.
Any updates on this? We have been trying to use this for a web app that's about to be used by a major Hotel chain and none of the workarounds seem to work. The only workable solution at this point is to redesign this part of the interface to make it simpler which is a shame. Any information would be greatly appreciated and thanks for all your great work.
It's a surprisingly hard problem. Part of the issue is that even if you implemented it or worked around it, updating a dependent array (which seems to be be the most common use case) would take O(n_2) time, which is a big problem even for fairly small datasets. To get it to be O(n), we'd need smarter array primitives to compose dependent arrays. There has been some_ work on this by Peter and others, and people are definitely interested in pushing it forward, but I wouldn't hold my breath.
Related: #1288, #2711.
For now I'd recommend generating the dependent arrays on the server, basically as "computed relationships".
Here's another fiddle demonstrating this issue: http://jsfiddle.net/3bGN4/268.
Example workaround, demonstrating nested @each:
If this is on the backburner, it would be helpful to note this behaviour in the API docs (maybe I missed it?) as it took me a while to find this ticket.
@dandehavilland Exactly! It should definitly be noted here: 'http://emberjs.com/guides/object-model/computed-properties-and-aggregate-data/'. "@each.goo.bar" is still not working, i've needed days to find this out.
Good idea. https://github.com/emberjs/website/pull/653
But technically you can view nested properties, just not nested collections of properties, right?
works - flagpole and flag are singular
schools.@each.flagpole.@each.flag
but should be
schools.@each.flagpole.flag
\ doesn't work - flags is a collection**
schools.@each.flags.@each.flag
@kingpin2k No, I don't believe any of those work. They won't update correctly.
[Edit: maybe I'm wrong]
@joliss here's a jsbin showing it. http://jsbin.com/IXalezO/11/edit
@kselden is this something you're likely to work on any time soon?
This is documented as not working. It would be great to add, but it's obviously difficult / not high enough a priority. If someone wants to work on it, we'd be happy to review a PR.
You can just add new computed property, which will contains only very nested object, which you're trying to observe. And @each will works correctly Use next method
allTickets: function () {
var sections = this.get('sections'),
each = Ember.$.each,
tickets = [];
each(sections, function (i, section) {
each(section.rows, function (j, row) {
each(row.tickets, function (k, ticket) {
tickets.addObject(ticket);
})
});
});
return tickets;
}.property(),
checkedCount: function () {
///custom logic
return something;
}.property('allTickets.@each.is_checked')
instead of
checkedCount: function () {
///custom logic
return something
}.property('sections.@each.rows.@each.tickets.@each.is_checked')
:+1:
This is so easy to miss in the guides. I believe it should issue a warning when a nested @each is found.
Yea, I agree. It should at-least throw a warning :+1:
This is still an issue many years later, correct? Is there a supported workaround of some sort?
Yes, you could always just build up computed properties at each level and watch the computed property instead of each property on each collection.
@kingpin2k I tried something like that, and it didn't work. Had to use .observes because the property never evaluated itself. There should really be some sort of built in Ember stuff to handle this, in my opinion.
Here's an example: http://emberjs.jsbin.com/faximekico/2/edit You essentially need to aggregate the values at the mid level.
I understand how to do it, the properties just don't fire, so observes had to be used.
Can you show me an example, properties are lazily loaded, so if you aren't actually attempting to get the properties, they won't "fire".
I never did an explicit .get to retrieve the property in question, I did have another computed property that was supposed to listen to it though. It seems that only an explicit get or use in a template makes them fire though, and not having another property observe them.
Correct, properties are only calculated on demand, just watching a property doesn't mean the property should be calculated. Rightfully so, if no one wants to use the property, there is no need to calculate the property.
@kingpin2k so what is recommend in this case? We're not supposed to use observes anymore.
My example shows how to accomplish the nested each dependencies without an observer. I don't recall anyone saying observers shouldn't be used anymore, but I don't religiously pay attention.
@kingpin2k your example uses a property, .property('model.books.@each.titles')
That gives me the same problem where it won't fire, as it is a property. I have another property that needs to observe that property.
@rwwagner90 the approach definitely works, I suspect there is another issue in your code causing this problem. Try posting a jsbin showing the problem to figure out what it is
I might understand what you are getting at, could you modify my example to clarify though?
Adding an observer on a nested property of objects within a collection does not reliably fire. I've created a test case that could be added to
ember-runtime/tests/mixins/array_test.js
that illustrates this. Observing a nested property on the EachProxy itself appears to work fine. However, observing the property using@each.nest.isDone
does not.In the following test,
count1
is incremented to 1,count2
is not: