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Marionette.Application

The Backbone.Marionette.Application object is the hub of your composite application. It organizes, initializes and coordinates the various pieces of your app. It also provides a starting point for you to call into from your HTML script block, or directly from your JavaScript files if you prefer to go that route.

The Application is meant to be instantiated directly, although you can extend it to add your own functionality.

MyApp = new Backbone.Marionette.Application();

Documentation Index

Adding Initializers

Your application needs to do useful things, like displaying content in your regions, starting up your routers, and more. To accomplish these tasks and ensure that your Application is fully configured, you can add initializer callbacks to the application.

MyApp.addInitializer(function(options){
  // do useful stuff here
  var myView = new MyView({
    model: options.someModel
  });
  MyApp.mainRegion.show(myView);
});

MyApp.addInitializer(function(options){
  new MyAppRouter();
  Backbone.history.start();
});

These callbacks will be executed when you start your application, and are bound to the application object as the context for the callback. In other words, this is the MyApp object inside of the initializer function.

The options argument is passed from the start method (see below).

Initializer callbacks are guaranteed to run, no matter when you add them to the app object. If you add them before the app is started, they will run when the start method is called. If you add them after the app is started, they will run immediately.

Application Event

The Application object raises a few events during its lifecycle, using the Marionette.triggerMethod function. These events can be used to do additional processing of your application. For example, you may want to pre-process some data just before initialization happens. Or you may want to wait until your entire application is initialized to start Backbone.history.

The events that are currently triggered, are:

MyApp.on("initialize:before", function(options){
  options.moreData = "Yo dawg, I heard you like options so I put some options in your options!"
});

MyApp.on("initialize:after", function(options){
  if (Backbone.history){
    Backbone.history.start();
  }
});

The options parameter is passed through the start method of the application object (see below).

Starting An Application

Once you have your application configured, you can kick everything off by calling: MyApp.start(options).

This function takes a single optional parameter. This parameter will be passed to each of your initializer functions, as well as the initialize events. This allows you to provide extra configuration for various parts of your app throughout the initialization sequence.

var options = {
  something: "some value",
  another: "#some-selector"
};

MyApp.start(options);

Messaging Systems

Application instances have an instance of all three messaging systems of Backbone.Wreqr attached to them. This section will give a brief overview of the systems; for a more in-depth look you are encouraged to read the Backbone.Wreqr documentation.

Event Aggregator

The Event Aggregator is available through the vent property. vent is convenient for passively sharing information between pieces of your application as events occur.

MyApp = new Backbone.Marionette.Application();

// Alert the user on the 'minutePassed' event
MyApp.vent.on("minutePassed", function(someData){
  alert("Received", someData);
});

// This will emit an event with the value of window.someData every minute
window.setInterval(function() {
  MyApp.vent.trigger("minutePassed", window.someData);
}, 1000 * 60);

Request Response

Request Response is a means for any component to request information from another component without being tightly coupled. An instance of Request Response is available on the Application as the reqres property.

MyApp = new Backbone.Marionette.Application();

// Set up a handler to return a todoList based on type
MyApp.reqres.setHandler("todoList", function(type){
  return this.todoLists[type];
});

// Make the request to get the grocery list
var groceryList = MyApp.reqres.request("todoList", "groceries");

// The request method can also be accessed directly from the application object
var groceryList = MyApp.request("todoList", "groceries");

Commands

Commands are used to make any component tell another component to perform an action without a direct reference to it. A Commands instance is available under the commands property of the Application.

Note that the callback of a command is not meant to return a value.

MyApp = new Backbone.Marionette.Application();

MyApp.model = new Backbone.Model();

// Set up the handler to call fetch on the model
MyApp.commands.setHandler("fetchData", function(reset){
  MyApp.model.fetch({reset: reset});
});

// Order that the data be fetched
MyApp.commands.execute("fetchData", true);

// The execute function is also available directly from the application
MyApp.execute("fetchData", true);

Regions And The Application Object

Marionette's Region objects can be directly added to an application by calling the addRegions method.

There are three syntax forms for adding a region to an application object.

jQuery Selector

The first is to specify a jQuery selector as the value of the region definition. This will create an instance of a Marionette.Region directly, and assign it to the selector:

MyApp.addRegions({
  someRegion: "#some-div",
  anotherRegion: "#another-div"
});

Custom Region Type

The second is to specify a custom region type, where the region type has already specified a selector:

MyCustomRegion = Marionette.Region.extend({
  el: "#foo"
});

MyApp.addRegions({
  someRegion: MyCustomRegion
});

Custom Region Type And Selector

The third method is to specify a custom region type, and a jQuery selector for this region instance, using an object literal:

MyCustomRegion = Marionette.Region.extend({});

MyApp.addRegions({

  someRegion: {
    selector: "#foo",
    regionType: MyCustomRegion
  },

  anotherRegion: {
    selector: "#bar",
    regionType: MyCustomRegion
  }

});

Get Region By Name

A region can be retrieved by name, using the getRegion method:

var app = new Marionette.Application();
app.addRegions({ r1: "#region1" });

// r1 === r1Again; true
var r1 = app.getRegion("r1");
var r1Again = app.r1;

Accessing a region by named attribute is equivalent to accessing it from the getRegion method.

Removing Regions

Regions can also be removed with the removeRegion method, passing in the name of the region to remove as a string value:

MyApp.removeRegion('someRegion');

Removing a region will properly close it before removing it from the application object.

For more information on regions, see the region documentation

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