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Building Single-page Web Apps with Meteor

You're reading from   Building Single-page Web Apps with Meteor Build real-time single page apps at lightning speed using the most powerful full-stack JavaScript framework around

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jan 2015
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781783988129
Length 198 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Fabian Vogelsteller Fabian Vogelsteller
Author Profile Icon Fabian Vogelsteller
Fabian Vogelsteller
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Table of Contents (15) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Getting Started with Meteor 2. Building HTML Templates FREE CHAPTER 3. Storing Data and Handling Collections 4. Controlling the Data Flow 5. Making Our App Versatile with Routing 6. Keeping States with Sessions 7. Users and Permissions 8. Security with the Allow and Deny Rules 9. Advanced Reactivity 10. Deploying Our App 11. Building Our Own Package 12. Testing in Meteor A. Appendix Index

Calling the method


Now that we have created our insertPost method, we can change the code in the submit event, where we inserted the post earlier in our editPost.js file, with a call to our method:

var slug = _.slugify(form.title.value);

Meteor.call('insertPost', {
  title:          form.title.value
  slug:           slug,
  description:    form.description.value
  text:           form.text.value,

}, function(error, slug) {
  Session.set('saveButton', 'Save Post');

  if(error) {
    return alert(error.reason);
  }

  // Here we use the (probably changed) slug from the server side method
  Router.go('Post', {slug: slug});
});

As we can see in the callback of the method call, we route to the newly created post using the slug variable we received as the second argument in the callback. This ensures that if the slug variable is modified on the server side, we use the modified version to route to the post. Additionally, we reset the saveButton session variable to change the text to Save Post...

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