A Backbone.js Collection of multiple Model subclasses

Tricote picture Tricote · Aug 3, 2011 · Viewed 15.1k times · Source

I have a REST Json API that returns a list "logbooks". There are many types of logbooks that implement different but similar behavior. The server side implementation of this on the Database layer is a sort of Single Table Inheritance, so each JSON representation of a logbook contains its "type" :

[
  {"type": "ULM", "name": "My uml logbook", ... , specific_uml_logbook_attr: ...},
  {"type": "Plane", "name": "My plane logbook", ... , specific_plane_logbook_attr: ...}
]

I would like to replicate this server model on the client side, so I have a base Logbook class and multiple logbook sub classes :

class Logbook extends Backbone.Model

class UmlLogbook extends Logbook

class PlaneLogbook extends Logbook

...

My Backbone.Collection is a set of Logbook models that i use to query the JSON API :

class LogbookCollection extends Backbone.Collection
  model: Logbook
  url: "/api/logbooks"

When I fetch the logbook collection, is there a way to cast each Logbook to its corresponding sub class (based on the JSON "type" attribute) ?

Answer

satchmorun picture satchmorun · Aug 4, 2011

There is indeed.

When you call 'fetch' on a collection, it passes the response through Backbone.Collection.parse before adding it to the collection.

The default implementation of 'parse' just passes the response through, as is, but you can override it to return a list of models to be added to the collection:

class Logbooks extends Backbone.Collection

  model: Logbook

  url: 'api/logbooks'

  parse: (resp, xhr) ->
    _(resp).map (attrs) ->
      switch attrs.type
        when 'UML' then new UmlLogbook attrs
        when 'Plane' then new PLaneLogbook attrs

EDIT: whoa, idbentley got there before me. the only difference being he used 'each' and I used 'map'. Both will work, but differently.

Using 'each' effectively breaks the chain that the 'fetch' call started (by returning 'undefined' - the subsequent call to 'reset' (or 'add') therefore will do nothing) and does all the processing right there in the parse function.

Using 'map' just transforms the list of attributes into a list of models and passes it back to the chain already in motion.

Different strokes.

EDIT AGAIN: just realized there's also another way to do this:

The 'model' attribute on a collection is there only so the collection knows how to make a new model if it's passed attributes in 'add', 'create' or 'reset'. So you could do something like:

class Logbooks extends Backbone.Collection

  model: (attrs, options) ->
    switch attrs.type
      when 'UML' then new UmlLogbook attrs, options
      when 'Plane' then new PLaneLogbook attrs, options
      # should probably add an 'else' here so there's a default if,
      # say, no attrs are provided to a Logbooks.create call

  url: 'api/logbooks'

The advantage of this is that the collection will now know how to 'cast' the right subclass of Logbook for operations other than 'fetch'.