When I pass {"silent":true}
while setting an attribute in a Backbone model, why doesn't that just suppress the change:attribute
event? What is the advantage of firing that event the next time an attribute is changed?
Update
Backbone 0.9.10 changed the behavior of passing { "silent": true }
. From the changelog:
Passing
{silent:true}
on change will no longer delay individual "change:attr" events, instead they are silenced entirely.
Browse the changelog here
This has confused me for some time as well.
The reason is that {silent:true} does not mean "Do everything as normal, but just don't trigger the event".
From various comments and answers by @jashkenas, what it seems to mean is "simply change the attribute value (and add it to the 'changedAttributes' hash), but defer all other "change-related" activities until later".
'silent' doesn't prevent the change
event for that/those properties, it simply queues up the 'announcement' until the next change
event is triggered.
So, its probably better named something like defer
.
Relevant information:
https://github.com/documentcloud/backbone/pull/850
the point of a "silent" change is that it isn't considered a change from the models point of view. Later, when the change actually occurs, you get the full difference all at once.
https://github.com/documentcloud/backbone/issues/870
Because the point of silent changes is that you're allowed to twiddle with the internal state of your model, temporarily, without actually making a change. Later, when the attribute actually changes, the validation runs and events are emitted. It wouldn't make sense to emit an error event when making a silent change.
Note: I have not tested this to confirm behavior, this is just based on my reading of the release notes...
As of Backbone 0.9.10, the behavior described above has changed. In that version (and newer), silent:true
suppresses the change:attr
events entirely - not just delays them.