Reputation: 1959
How to read XML and append in view with Backbone.
XML file has been read and successfully appended in view. But i don't know how to approach in Backbone structure (Using its Model).
asseturl
, width
, height
)<library>
<assets>
<asset asseturl="img_1.png" width="100" height="150"></asset>
<asset asseturl="img_2.png" width="200" height="250"></asset>
<asset asseturl="img_3.png" width="300" height="350"></asset>
</assets>
</library>
var Book = Backbone.Model.extend();
var Books = Backbone.Collection.extend({
model: Book,
url: "file.xml",
parse: function (data)
{
var $xml = $(data);
return $xml.find('assets').map(function()
{
var bookTitle = $(this).find('asset').each(function(){
var this_url = $(this).attr('asseturl');
var this_width = $(this).attr('width');
var this_height = $(this).attr('height');
$('.character-list').append('<li><span class="asset char">'+
'<img width="'+this_width+'" height="'+this_height+'" src="'+this_url+'">'+
'</span></li>');
});
return {title: bookTitle};
}).get();
},
fetch: function (options)
{
options = options || {};
options.dataType = "xml";
return Backbone.Collection.prototype.fetch.call(this, options);
}
});
var bookListView = Backbone.View.extend({
initialize: function ()
{
this.listenTo(this.collection, "sync", this.render);
},
render: function ()
{
console.log(this.collection.toJSON());
}
});
var bks = new Books();
new bookListView({collection: bks});
bks.fetch();
<ul class="character-list">
</ul>
Even-though the above append functionality works for me, it's not good practice to approach this in Backbone parse
function.
Upvotes: 1
Views: 385
Reputation: 17430
Don't put the rendering logic into the collection's parse
function.
The collection's role is to manage models and syncing with an API. It's the view's responsibility to render.
First, let's simplify the collection parsing. From the Backbone documentation, parse
should do the following only:
The function is passed the raw
response
object, and should return the array of model attributes to be added to the collection.
parse: function(response) {
var $xml = $(response);
// this will return an array of objects
return $xml.find('assets').children('asset').map(function() {
var $asset = $(this);
// returns raw "model" attributes
return {
asseturl: $asset.attr('asseturl'),
width: $asset.attr('width'),
height: $asset.attr('height')
};
}).get();
},
Then, make a simple view for each asset:
var BookView = Backbone.View.extend({
tagName: 'li',
template: _.template('<span class="asset char"><img width="<%= width %>" height="<%= height %>" src="<%= asseturl %>"></span>'),
render: function() {
this.$el.html(this.template(this.model.toJSON()));
return this;
}
});
And it's in the list view that the rendering of each assets is handled.
var BookListView = Backbone.View.extend({
initialize: function() {
this.childViews = [];
this.listenTo(this.collection, "sync", this.render);
},
render: function() {
this.$el.empty();
this.collection.each(this.renderBook, this);
return this;
},
renderBook: function(model) {
var view = new BookView({ model: model });
this.childViews.push(view);
this.$el.append(view.render().el);
},
});
To use it:
var bks = new Books(),
view = new BookListView({ el: $('.character-list'), collection: bks });
view.render();
bks.fetch();
Upvotes: 1