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ember-cli-simple-store
Advanced tools
ember-cli addon that provides a simple identity map for ember.js web applications
ember-cli addon that provides a simple identity map for ember.js web applications
1) remove ember-data from your package.json file
2) remove ember-data from your bower.json file
3) rm -rf node_modules/ember-data
4) rm -rf bower_components/ember-data
5) npm install ember-cli-simple-store --save-dev
//create or update person model
store.push("person", {id: 1, name: "toran"});
//remove person model with id=123
store.remove("person", 123);
//find all person models
store.find("person");
//find a single person model with id=123
store.find("person", 123);
//find all person models with account_id=789
store.find("person", {account_id: 789});
//find all person models with name toran and salary > 100
var filter = function(person) {
var name = person.get("name");
var salary = person.get("salary");
return name === "toran" && salary > 100;
}
store.find("person", filter, ["salary", "name"]);
//find the first person model
store.findOne("person");
//clear the entire identity map of all person models
store.clear("person");
//clear the entire identity map of all models
store.clear();
Below I'll show how you can use the store with a simple ember object to find/add/remove/update
The full example below relies on a small xhr mixin PromiseMixin
import PromiseMixin from "js/mixins/promise";
var Person = Ember.Object.extend({
firstName: "",
lastName: "",
phone: ""
}).reopenClass({
find: function(store) {
return PromiseMixin.xhr("/api/people/", "GET").then(function(response) {
response.forEach(function(person) {
store.push("person", person);
});
return store.find("person");
});
},
findById: function(store, id) {
return store.find("person", id);
},
insert: function(store, person) {
var self = this;
var hash = {data: JSON.stringify(person)};
return new Ember.RSVP.Promise(function(resolve,reject) {
return PromiseMixin.xhr("/api/people/", "POST", hash).then(function(persisted) {
var inserted = store.push("person", persisted);
resolve(inserted);
}, function(err) {
reject(err);
});
});
},
update: function(person) {
var person_id = person.get("id");
var hash = {data: JSON.stringify(person)};
var endpoint = "/api/people/%@/".fmt(person_id);
return PromiseMixin.xhr(endpoint, "PUT", hash);
},
remove: function(store, person) {
var self = this;
var person_id = person.get("id");
var endpoint = "/api/people/%@/".fmt(person_id);
return new Ember.RSVP.Promise(function(resolve,reject) {
return PromiseMixin.xhr(endpoint, "DELETE").then(function(arg) {
store.remove("person", person_id);
resolve(arg);
}, function(err) {
reject(err);
});
});
}
});
export default Person;
With this simple reference implementation you can side step the relationship complexity by adding what you need in your route(s)
import Action from "js/models/action";
import Person from "js/models/person";
var PeoplePersonRoute = Ember.Route.extend({
model: function(params) {
var store = this.get("store");
var person = Person.findById(store, params.person_id);
var actions = Action.findByPerson(store, params.person_id);
return Ember.RSVP.hash({person: person, actions: actions});
},
setupController: function(controller, hash) {
controller.set("model", hash.person);
controller.set("actions", hash.actions);
}
});
This approach is not without it's tradeoffs
I've personally found this is a great approach for apps that want to avoid the complexity of bigger projects like ember-data, but still need a single pointer /reference for the models in your ember application.
If you want the ability to track if your model is dirty use the attr for each field and the Model base class to get save/rollback
import { attr, Model } from "ember-cli-simple-store/model";
var Person = Model.extend({
firstName: attr(),
lastName: attr(),
fullName: function() {
var first = this.get("firstName");
var last = this.get("lastName");
return first + " " + last;
}.property("firstName", "lastName")
});
//save your object to reset isDirty
var person = Person.create({id: 1, firstName: "x", lastName: "y"});
person.set("firstName", "toran");
person.save();
//rollback your object to reset isDirty and restore it
person.set("firstName", "foobar");
person.rollback();
If you want to know if an individual property isDirty you can ask like so
person.get("firstNameIsDirty"); //undefined
person.set("firstName", "foobar");
person.get("firstNameIsDirty"); //true
npm install
ember test
https://github.com/toranb/ember-cli-store-example
https://github.com/toranb/ember-cli-store-dirty-tracking-example
Copyright © 2015 Toran Billups http://toranbillups.com
Licensed under the MIT License
FAQs
ember-cli addon that provides a simple identity map for ember.js web applications
The npm package ember-cli-simple-store receives a total of 16 weekly downloads. As such, ember-cli-simple-store popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that ember-cli-simple-store demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 3 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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