@frui.ts/views
View discovery
In order to support ViewModel-driven workflow, view discovery is an essential feature. This means that based on a particular view model instance, we should be able to find proper view and display it.
This feature consists of two parts - view registry that is a list of all available view models and their assigned views, and View
component that makes the lookup and rendering.
In order to register a view, use the registerView(view, viewModelConstructor, context?)
function. If you need to register multiple views for a view model (e.g., main view, side bar, toolbar, etc.), use the context
argument.
The View
component accepts the following props:
vm
- the actual view model to be displayedcontext
- optionally provide value to specify a view to useuseLifecycle
- if set to true
, the view will pass lifecycle events (activate, deactivate) to the view model. This is needed only for the top-most root view because all child view models will receive the events from their parent view model.fallbackMode
- by default, the view throws an error when the appropriate view cannot be found. You can set message
or empty
to display an error message or empty control instead.
Usage
import { observer } from "mobx-react-lite";
import { registerView } from "@frui.ts/views";
const loginView: React.SFC<{ vm: LoginViewModel }> = observer(({ vm }) => (
<TextBox target={vm.credentials} property="login" />
<TextBox target={vm.credentials} property="password" type="password" />
);
export default registerView(loginView, LoginViewModel);
Let's have RootViewModel
as follows:
class RootViewModel extends ConductorSingleChild<LoginViewModel | DataViewModel> {
...
}
We can display proper views for the currently active child of the RootViewModel
:
...
<aside>
<View vm={vm.activeChild} context="sidebar" fallbackMode="empty" />
</aside>
<main>
<View vm={vm.activeChild} />
</main>
BindingComponent
The core component for 2-way binding is BindingComponent
, a wrapper around any visual component.
When creating a custom bindable control, you can use the following:
this.value
- contains the value that the control is bound to, use it in the underlying componentthis.setValue(value)
- call this and pass the new value when user changes the value through the underlying componentthis.inheritedProps
- contains the props passed to the wrapper except binding specific properties, so that you can directly pass it to the underlying component
Example
export class TextBox<TTarget> extends BindingComponent<IBindingProps<TTarget>, TTarget> {
render() {
return (
<Observer>
{() => (
<input {...this.inheritedProps} type="text" value={this.value || ""} onChange={this.handleValueChanged} />
)}
</Observer>
);
}
@bind
protected handleValueChanged(e: React.ChangeEvent<HTMLInputElement>) {
this.setValue(e.target.value);
}
}
<TextBox target="{vm.item}" property="firstName" placeholder="First name" />