Previous post: Entity reference
I’ve been extending my original post (above) in an effort to create a simple entity system using Ember.js (SproutCore 2.0). While it’s grown in sophistication, it is far from complete.
The project is now located on GitHub.
This is the introduction, from the readme on GitHub.
EmberJS – EZData
EZData is a library intended to a simple way of accessing data from a relational database when using Ember.js. It will never try to be everything to everyone. :) Instead, it’s intended to be small, efficient, and easy to learn and use javascript library.
The basic functionality is that it’s designed to manipulate individual entities (or Records), not a complex object structure that is often stored as JavaScript objects. This mirrors what’s found in many web systems today in the data model.
Right now, the project is brand new and quite in flux.
Essentials
Create types by calling Entity.define
(instead of the typical
Ember.Object.extend).
DemoApp.Person = Entity.define(Entity, "Person", { firstName:String, lastName:String, DOB:Date, fullName:function () { return this.get('lastName') + ", " + this.get('firstName'); }.property('firstName', 'lastName') });
This will create a new Class internally by using Ember.extend
but it
also does some other magic (e.g., creating a data store for all entities of a given
type). First and foremost, by calling define
, it’s expected that
you’re mirroring a relational data structure of some sort which may have
foreign key relationships to other tables.
In the example above, the Person
entity is expected to have the
following columns in a database table:
- id => Number (from the basic Entity type)
- firstName => String
- lastName => String
- DOB => DOB
Each property is assigned the basic data type that it will contain. The data type is used for linking and serialization.
Linking
The second example is a Gift
:
DemoApp.Gift = Entity.define(Entity, "Gift", { from:DemoApp.Person });
The Gift class is more interesting as one of the properties links to another type/Class (Person). As a direct connection to a Person as an object instance isn’t possible in traditional relational tables, some automatic linking occurs by declaring this linkage.
The from
property is mapped to a second, hidden property that is only
used for the foreign key relationship. By default, the hidden property will be
calledfromPersonId
. This can be overridden by creating a custom naming
function, replacing the default stored
atEntity.Settings.FOREIGN_KEY_GENERATOR_FUNCTION
.
By making the linkage between the two types in the way demonstrated above, the
standard Ember.js handlebar templating engine (and automatic value updating)
features just work (see from.fullName
below).
{{#each gifts}} <tr> <td> {{ name }} </td> <td> {{ excitement }} </td> <td> {{ from.fullName }} </td> </tr>
The fullName
property of Person is a computed property, and continues
to work as expected.
Getting the Data
If you want to retrieve a list from one of the data stores (or data tables),
it’s a simple as calling the live
function for one of the stores.
In the example below, there are two live collections. The first returns all of the
gifts, and the second only returns gifts that have a lowercase letter
o
in the name.
// create some "live" connections to the data store DemoApp.mainController.set('gifts', Entity.Stores.get(DemoApp.Gift).live()); // create a live connection with a filter (returns true if it contains the letter 'o') DemoApp.mainController.set('giftsFiltered', Entity.Stores.get(DemoApp.Gift).live( function () { return this.get('name').indexOf('o') > -1; }));
To get access to one of the automatically created data stores, call
Entity.Stores.get({Class})
where {Class}
is the type that
was created using thedefine
method.
Notes / Cautions
Right now, all entities are required to have a property called id and be of type Number.
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