view-debug.js revision abe38d7e07e114761db3feb3c22ef22fce3eccca
YUI.add('view', function(Y) {
/**
Represents a logical piece of an application's user interface, and provides a
lightweight, overridable API for rendering content and handling delegated DOM
events on a container element.
@submodule view
@since 3.4.0
**/
/**
Represents a logical piece of an application's user interface, and provides a
lightweight, overridable API for rendering content and handling delegated DOM
events on a container element.
The View class imposes little structure and provides only minimal functionality
of its own: it's basically just an overridable API interface that helps you
implement custom views.
@class View
@constructor
@extends Base
@since 3.4.0
**/
function View() {
View.superclass.constructor.apply(this, arguments);
}
Y.View = Y.extend(View, Y.Base, {
// -- Public Properties ----------------------------------------------------
/**
Container node into which this view's content will be rendered.
The container node serves as the host for all DOM events attached by the
view. Delegation is used to handle events on children of the container,
allowing the container's contents to be re-rendered at any time without
losing event subscriptions.
The default container is a simple `<div>`, but you can override this in a
subclass, or by passing in a custom `container` config value at
instantiation time.
When `container` is overridden by a subclass or passed as a config option at
instantiation time, it may be provided as an HTML string, a DOM element, or
a `Y.Node` instance. During initialization, this view's `create()` method
will be called to convert the container into a `Y.Node` instance if it isn't
one already.
The container is not added to the page automatically. This allows you to
have full control over how and when your view is actually rendered to the
page.
@property container
@type HTMLElement|Node|String
@default `"<div/>"`
**/
container: '<div/>',
/**
Hash of CSS selectors mapped to events to delegate to elements matching
those selectors.
CSS selectors are relative to the `container` element. Events are attached
to the container, and delegation is used so that subscribers are only
notified of events that occur on elements inside the container that match
the specified selectors. This allows the container's contents to be
re-rendered as needed without losing event subscriptions.
Event handlers can be specified either as functions or as strings that map
to function names on this view instance or its prototype.
The `this` object in event handlers will refer to this view instance. If
you'd prefer `this` to be something else, use `Y.bind()` to bind a custom
`this` object.
@example
var view = new Y.View({
events: {
// Call `this.toggle()` whenever the element with the id
// "toggle-button" is clicked.
'#toggle-button': {click: 'toggle'},
// Call `this.hoverOn()` when the mouse moves over any element
// with the "hoverable" class, and `this.hoverOff()` when the
// mouse moves out of any element with the "hoverable" class.
'.hoverable': {
mouseover: 'hoverOn',
mouseout : 'hoverOff'
}
}
});
@property events
@type Object
@default `{}`
**/
events: {},
/**
Model instance associated with this view instance.
This is entirely optional. There's no requirement that views be associated
with models, but if you do intend to associate your view with a model, then
specifying that model instance at instantiation time will cause a reference
to be stored here for convenience.
@property model
@type Model
@default undefined
**/
/**
ModelList instance associated with this view instance.
This is entirely optional. There's no requirement that views be associated
with model lists, but if you do intend to associate your view with a model
list, then specifying that list instance at instantiation time will cause a
reference to be stored here for convenience.
@property modelList
@type ModelList
@default undefined
**/
/**
Template for this view.
This is a convenience property that has no default behavior of its own. It's
only provided as a convention to allow you to store whatever you consider to
be a template, whether that's an HTML string, a `Y.Node` instance, a
Mustache template, or anything else your little heart desires.
How this template gets used is entirely up to you and your custom `render()`
method.
@property template
@type any
@default `''`
**/
template: '',
// -- Lifecycle Methods ----------------------------------------------------
initializer: function (config) {
config || (config = {});
this.container = this.create(config.container || this.container);
// Use config properties if present; otherwise default to prototype
// properties.
config.model && (this.model = config.model);
config.modelList && (this.modelList = config.modelList);
config.template && (this.template = config.template);
// Merge events from the config into events in `this.events`, then
// attach the events to the container node.
this.events = config.events ?
Y.merge(this.events, config.events) : this.events;
this.attachEvents(this.events);
},
destructor: function () {
// Remove the container from the DOM and purge all event listeners.
this.container && this.container.remove(true);
},
// -- Public Methods -------------------------------------------------------
/**
Attaches delegated event handlers to this view's `container` element. This
method is called internally to subscribe to events configured in the
`events` property or config attribute when the view is initialized.
You may override this method to customize the event attaching logic.
@method attachEvents
@param {Object} events Hash of events to attach. See the docs for the
`events` property for details on the format.
**/
attachEvents: function (events) {
var container = this.container,
owns = Y.Object.owns,
handler, handlers, name, selector;
for (selector in events) {
if (!owns(events, selector)) { continue; }
handlers = events[selector];
for (name in handlers) {
if (!owns(handlers, name)) { continue; }
handler = handlers[name];
if (typeof handler === 'string') {
handler = this[handler];
}
container.delegate(name, handler, selector, this);
}
}
},
/**
Creates and returns this view's `container` node from the specified HTML
string, DOM element, or existing `Y.Node` instance. This method is called
internally when the view is initialized.
By default, the created node is _not_ added to the DOM automatically.
You may override this method to customize how the container node is created
(such as by rendering it from a template). Your method should return a
`Y.Node` instance.
@method create
@param {HTMLElement|Node|String} container HTML string, DOM element, or
`Y.Node` instance to use as the container node.
@return {Node} Node instance of the created container node.
**/
create: function (container) {
return typeof container === 'string' ?
Y.Node.create(container) : Y.one(container);
},
/**
Removes this view's `container` element from the DOM (if it's in the DOM),
but doesn't destroy it or any event listeners attached to it.
@method remove
@chainable
**/
remove: function () {
this.container && this.container.remove();
return this;
},
/**
Renders the view.
This method is a noop by default. Override it in your subclass to provide a
custom implementation that renders this view's content and appends it to the
`container` element. Ideally your `render` method should also return `this`
as the end to allow chaining, but that's up to you.
Since there's no default renderer, you're free to render your view however
you see fit, whether that means manipulating the DOM directly, dumping
strings into `innerHTML`, or using a template language of some kind.
For basic templating needs, `Y.Node.create()` and `Y.Lang.sub()` may
suffice, but there are no restrictions on what tools or techniques you can
use to render your view. All you need to do is append something to the
`container` element at some point, and optionally append the `container`
to the DOM if it's not there already.
@method render
@chainable
**/
render: function () {
return this;
}
}, {
NAME: 'view'
});
}, '@VERSION@' ,{requires:['base-build', 'node-event-delegate']});