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MASTERING KNOCKOUTJS

You're reading from   MASTERING KNOCKOUTJS Use and extend Knockout to deliver feature-rich, modern web applications

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Product type Paperback
Published in Nov 2014
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781783981007
Length 270 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Timothy Moran Timothy Moran
Author Profile Icon Timothy Moran
Timothy Moran
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Toc

Table of Contents (11) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Knockout Essentials 2. Extending Knockout with Custom Binding Handlers FREE CHAPTER 3. Extending Knockout with Preprocessors and Providers 4. Application Development with Components and Modules 5. Durandal – the Knockout Framework 6. Advanced Durandal 7. Best Practices 8. Plugins and Other Knockout Libraries 9. Under the Hood Index

Template binding

The template binding is a special control flow binding. It has a parameter for each of the other control flow bindings. It might be more accurate to say that the other control flow bindings are all aliases for the template binding:

  <ul data-bind="foreach: { data: categories, as: 'category' }">
  <ul data-bind="template: { foreach: categories, as: 'category' }">

Both of these are functionally equivalent. The template binding as has a parameter for if and data (which together make a with binding).

However, unlike the other control flow bindings, it can also generate its template from a named source using the name parameter. By default, the only source Knockout looks for is a <script> tag with an id parameter matching the name parameter:

<div data-bind="template: { name: 'person-template', data: seller }"></div>
<script type="text/html" id="person-template">
    <h3 data-bind="text: name"></h3>
    <p>Credits: <span data-bind="text: credits"></span></p>
</script>

To stop the script block from being executed as JavaScript, you need a dummy script type, such as text/html or text/ko. Knockout will not apply bindings to script elements, but it will use them as a source for templates.

Though it is much more common to use the inline templates seen in foreach or with, named templates have three very important uses.

Reusable templates

As templates can reference an external source for the HTML, it is possible to have multiple template bindings pointing to a single source:

<div>
  <div data-bind="template: { name: 'person', data: father} "></div>
  <div data-bind="template: { name: 'person', data: mother} "></div>
</div>
...
<script type="text/html" id="person">
  <h3 data-bind="text: name"></h3>
  <strong>Age: </strong>
<span data-bind="text: age"></span><br>
  <strong>Location: </strong>
<span data-bind="text: location"></span><br>
  <strong>Favorite Color: </strong>
<span data-bind="text: favoriteColor"></span><br>
</script>

The branch cp1-reuse has an example of this technique.

Recursive templates

Because templates participate in data-binding themselves, it is possible for a template to bind against itself. If a template references itself, the result is recursive:

<div data-bind="template: { name: 'personTemplate', data: forefather} "></div>

<script type="text/html" id="personTemplate">
  <h4 data-bind="text: name"></h4>
  <ul data-bind="foreach: children">
    <li data-bind="template: 'personTemplate'"></li>
  </ul>
</script>

The template reference in the preceding template is using the shorthand binding, which just takes the name of the template directly. When using this shorthand, the current binding context is used for the template's data parameter, which is perfect inside a foreach loop like this one. This is a common technique when using recursive templates, as trees of information are the most common place to find visual recursion.

An example of this recursive template is in the cp1-recurse branch.

Dynamic templates

The name of the template in the previous example is a string, but it could be a property reference too. Binding the template name to an observable allows you to control which template is rendered. This could be useful to swap a viewmodel's template between a display and edit mode. Consider this template binding:

<div data-bind="template: { name: template, data: father} "></div>

This template binding backed by a viewmodel property such as this one:

self.template = ko.computed(function() {
  return self.editing() ? 'editTemplate' : 'viewTemplate';
});

If we update the editing property from true to false, the template will re-render from viewTemplate to editTemplate. This allows us to programmatically switch between them.

An example of a dynamic edit/view template is in the cp1-dynamic branch.

In an advanced scenario, you could use a technique such as this for creating a generic container on a page to display entirely different views. Switching the template name and the data at the same time would mimic navigation, creating a Single Page Application (SPA). We will take a look at a similar technique when we get to Chapter 4, Application Development with Components and Modules.

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