This library can be used as a standalone library or as a separate dependencies library, in which case we will need to add the following entry to the require config file:
require.config({
paths: {
'ju-components' : 'lib/vendor/ju-components'
}
});
Components are self contained blocks whose intention is to be easily reusable, modular and provide a common interface to interact with other components.
They're defined as a hierarchical set of objects, that handle resources (stylesheets, markup, translations, and options, contextual and configuration data), data and visual elements.
Here we provide some details about their life cycle, definition and a subset of the API.
The most important elements are the resources
, the children definition
and the component's class definition itself.
{
cssFile : [ list of css file paths ],
l10n : [ list of l10n keys ],
template : [ list of template paths ],
optionsData : [ list of options data keys ],
appConfig : [ list of app config keys ],
context : { dictionary of handler_name => { handler options } }
}
{
component : {
component : 'path/to/a/component',
insertionPoint : '.imASelector',
opts : { component-dependent options }
}
}
An implementation that inherits from BaseComponent class.
Here you can set options and resource map.
Should be called only in a root component (i.e. a component with no parent, automatically called on children components). It's the entry point to build a component. insertionPoint: an element where we'll insert the component. Anything jQuery can handle.
Using the children definition, creates instances of all of them.
Performs a single request to retrieve the resources required by the whole component tree.
After the resources are loaded, stores a $view
reference, sets up some resources, caches the tags defined in this.S
, automatically calls bindEvents
and performs children set up.
Implicit flow during setup
:
this.$view
is settranslateOptions
is calledconfigureComponent
is called (you should overwrite it and callappendToView
to initialize view)_findLocalElems
is called (setsthis.t
with cached tags)bindEvents
is called (you should overwrite it for event binding)childrenSetup
is calledREADY
event is triggeredsetupCompleted
is called
If the component includes capabilities to communicate with the server using a proxy (i.e. they extend from BaseWithProxy) they can retrieve a payload to load data into the component tree.
The most important methods are getData
and setData
. Both of them produce/consume an object that's mapped to the component hierarchy. In other words, for the following object:
{ name : { first_name : 'Satanás', last_name : 'Ramírez' }, identification : '333' }
And the following component definition in any root component:
{
name : { component : 'somepath', insertionPoint : 'someInsertionPoint},
identification : { component : 'somepath', insertionPoint : 'someInsertionPoint}
}
And the following children definition for name
component:
{
first_name : { component : 'somepath', insertionPoint : 'someInsertionPoint},
last_name : { component : 'somepath', insertionPoint : 'someInsertionPoint}
}
We can rely in an implicit flow that will take advantage of the mapping to pass the data to the component whose key matches the data key. In other words, if we setData
in the parent component of name
and identification
, the first_name
and last_name
data will be set into the components with the same name without any additional code.
The same happens for getData
. The produced object will have the same structure as the one of the component tree, so we can have a payload ready to be passed to anybody expecting the same JSON data defined above.
- You can define a
this.S
object with selectors. The keys will be mapped to athis.t
object with the same keys defined inthis.S
but with a dollar sign at the beginning. (e.g. S = { view : '.view'} => t = {$view : jQuery object } ) - Always prefer composition over inheritance when creating new components.
- Always use templates when dynamic markup generation is required.
- There are methods to manipulate the get/setData flow. Always try to keep the implicit flow unmodified unless you have to make data-specific operations (like in the case you have a component whose data shouldn't be get, so you override getData to prevent that to happen)