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active-model-adapter
Advanced tools
ember install active-model-adapter
This gem comes bundled with Ember
Rails. If you want to specify a
specific version in your Gemfile
, you can reference the
active-model-adapter-source
gem and it will get loaded by Ember Rails:
gem 'active-model-adapter-source', '~>1.13' # or whatever version you need
bower install --save active-model-adapter
Grab a copy of active-model-adapter.js from http://github.com/ember-data/active-model-adapter-dist
You should make an ApplicationAdapter
if you don't already have one:
// app/adapters/application.js
import ActiveModelAdapter from 'active-model-adapter';
export default ActiveModelAdapter.extend();
If you need to subclass the ActiveModelSerializer
, you can import it
into your serializer:
// app/serializers/post.js
import { ActiveModelSerializer } from 'active-model-adapter';
export default ActiveModelSerializer.extend();
The ActiveModelAdapter is a subclass of the RESTAdapter designed to integrate with a JSON API that uses an underscored naming convention instead of camelCasing.
It has been designed to work out of the box with the
active_model_serializers
Ruby gem. This Adapter expects specific settings using ActiveModel::Serializers,
embed :ids, embed_in_root: true
which sideloads the records.
The ActiveModelAdapter expects the JSON returned from your server to follow the REST adapter conventions substituting underscored keys for camelcased ones. Unlike the DS.RESTAdapter, async relationship keys must be the singular form of the relationship name, followed by "_id" for DS.belongsTo relationships, or "_ids" for DS.hasMany relationships.
Attribute names in your JSON payload should be the underscored versions of
the attributes in your Ember.js models.
For example, if you have a Person
model:
// app/models/famous-person.js
export default var FamousPerson = DS.Model.extend({
firstName: DS.attr('string'),
lastName: DS.attr('string'),
occupation: DS.attr('string')
});
The JSON returned should look like this:
{
"famous_person": {
"id": 1,
"first_name": "Barack",
"last_name": "Obama",
"occupation": "President"
}
}
Let's imagine that Occupation
and Person
are just another model:
// app/models/person.js
export default var Person = DS.Model.extend({
firstName: DS.attr('string'),
lastName: DS.attr('string'),
occupation: DS.belongsTo('occupation')
});
// app/models/occupation
App.Occupation = DS.Model.extend({
name: DS.attr('string'),
salary: DS.attr('number'),
people: DS.hasMany('person')
});
The JSON needed to avoid extra server calls, should look like this:
{
"people": [{
"id": 1,
"first_name": "Barack",
"last_name": "Obama",
"occupation_id": 1
}],
"occupations": [{
"id": 1,
"name": "President",
"salary": 100000,
"person_ids": [1]
}]
}
git clone
this repositorynpm install
bower install
ember test
ember test --server
ember build
For more information on using ember-cli, visit http://www.ember-cli.com/.
1.13.5 July 21, 2015
FAQs
Adapters and Serializers for Rails's ActiveModel::Serializers
The npm package active-model-adapter receives a total of 19,240 weekly downloads. As such, active-model-adapter popularity was classified as popular.
We found that active-model-adapter demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 15 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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