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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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Table of Contents (11) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Knockout Essentials FREE CHAPTER 2. Extending Knockout with Custom Binding Handlers 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

Sticking to MVVM


Knockout was designed with the Model-View-ViewModel (MVVM) pattern in mind. While it is possible to develop applications using Knockout and other design patterns, sticking to MVVM will produce a natural alignment between Knockout and your own code.

The view and the viewmodel

The separation of concerns is the key here. Don't introduce view concepts such as DOM elements or CSS classes into your viewmodel; these belong in the HTML. Limit or avoid business logic and inline binding functions in your view; these belong as properties or functions in your viewmodel. Keeping these two separated makes it possible for the work to be divided and parallelized, allows the viewmodel to be reusable, and makes it possible to unit test the viewmodel.

Cluttering the viewmodel

Animation handlers are a good example of view logic that often ends up in the viewmodel. The foreach binding handler has several postprocessing hooks (such as afteradd, afterrender, and beforeremove) that are intended to...

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