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ember-cli-simple-store

ember-cli addon that provides a simple identity map for ember.js web applications

  • 4.0.0-beta.4
  • Source
  • npm
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ember-cli-simple-store

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Description

ember-cli addon that provides a simple identity map for ember.js web applications

Installation

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

You get 5 methods: push/remove/find/findOne/clear

//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();

Using the store by example

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 addon PromiseMixin

import Ember from "ember";
import PromiseMixin from "ember-promise/mixins/promise";

var PersonRepository = Ember.Object.extend({
    find: function() {
        var store = this.get("store");
        return PromiseMixin.xhr("/api/people/", "GET").then(function(response) {
            response.forEach(function(person) {
                store.push("person", person);
            });
            return store.find("person");
        });
    },
    findById: function(id) {
        var store = this.get("store");
        return store.find("person", id);
    },
    insert: function(person) {
        var self = this;
        var store = this.get("store");
        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(person) {
        var self = this;
        var store = this.get("store");
        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 PersonRepository;

What about relationship support?

With this simple reference implementation you can side step the relationship complexity by adding what you need in your route

export default Ember.Route.extend({
    model: function(params) {
        var store = this.get("store");
        var model = store.find("todo", params.todo_id);
        var notes = store.find("note", {todo_id: params.todo_id});
        return Ember.RSVP.hash({model: model, notes: notes});
    },
    setupController: function(controller, hash) {
        controller.set("model", hash.model);
        controller.set("notes", hash.notes);
    }
});

This approach is not without it's tradeoffs

  • you need to inject the store instance into each class that does data access (service/repository/route/controller)
  • you need to write each xhr yourself and pull objects from the store / push objects into the store

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 each model in your ember application.

What about dirty tracking?

If you want the ability to track if your model is dirty use the attr for each field and the Model 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

For new forms that start with undefined properties you can define the default state for isDirty. Example: you have a model that is bound to a form with a checkbox input. The create form starts with a new model so each bound property is undefined. If the user decides to check the bound checkbox (setting the value to true) and then decides to uncheck it (setting the value to false) you would expect the form is not dirty - but because undefined !== false you find the model is dirty. To prevent this behavior set a default value for dirty tracking on the models attr like so.

var Animal = Model.extend({
    omnivore: attr(false)
});

var animal = Animal.create();

animal.get("omnivore"); //undefined
animal.get("isDirty"); //false
animal.set("omnivore", true);
animal.get("isDirty"); //true
animal.set("omnivore", false);
animal.get("isDirty"); //false

Example applications

Simplest example with the least amount of complexity (tests included)

https://github.com/toranb/kanban-board-without-ember-data

Async example that will paint right away (loading section included w/ tests)

https://github.com/toranb/async-kanban-board-store-example

Async example with relationships (loading section included w/ tests)

https://github.com/toranb/async-kanban-with-relationships-store-example

Dirty tracking example with both save and rollback

https://github.com/toranb/ember-cli-store-dirty-tracking-example

Running the unit tests

npm install
ember test

License

Copyright © 2015 Toran Billups http://toranbillups.com

Licensed under the MIT License

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Package last updated on 07 Jan 2016

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