The CollectionView will loop through all of the models in the
specified collection, render each of them using a specified childView,
then append the results of the child view's el to the collection view's
el. By default the CollectionView will maintain a sorted collection's order
in the DOM. This behavior can be disabled by specifying {sort: false} on initialize.
CollectionView has the base functionality provided by the View Mixin.
childView
emptyView
render
destroyCollectionViews
childViewSpecify a childView in your collection view definition. This must be
a Backbone view class definition, not an instance. It can be any
Backbone.View or be derived from Marionette.View.
var Mn = require('backbone.marionette');
var MyChildView = Mn.View.extend({});
Mn.CollectionView.extend({
childView: MyChildView
});
Child views must be defined before they are referenced by the
childView attribute in a collection view definition.
Alternatively, you can specify a childView in the options for
the constructor:
var Mn = require('backbone.marionette');
var MyCollectionView = Mn.CollectionView.extend({...});
new MyCollectionView({
childView: MyChildView
});
If you do not specify a childView, an exception will be thrown
stating that you must specify a childView.
You can also define childView as a function. In this form, the value
returned by this method is the ChildView class that will be instantiated
when a Model needs to be initially rendered. This method also gives you
the ability to customize per Model ChildViews.
var Bb = require('backbone');
var Mn = require('backbone.marionette');
var FooBar = Bb.Model.extend({
defaults: {
isFoo: false
}
});
var FooView = Mn.View.extend({
template: '#foo-template'
});
var BarView = Mn.View.extend({
template: '#bar-template'
});
var MyCollectionView = Mn.CollectionView.extend({
collection: new Bb.Collection(),
childView: function(item) {
// Choose which view class to render,
// depending on the properties of the item model
if (item.get('isFoo')) {
return FooView;
}
else {
return BarView;
}
}
});
var collectionView = new MyCollectionView();
var foo = new FooBar({
isFoo: true
});
var bar = new FooBar({
isFoo: false
});
// Renders a FooView
collectionView.collection.add(foo);
// Renders a BarView
collectionView.collection.add(bar);
childViewOptionsThere may be scenarios where you need to pass data from your parent
collection view in to each of the childView instances. To do this, provide
a childViewOptions definition on your collection view as an object
literal. This will be passed to the constructor of your childView as part
of the options.
var Mn = require('backbone.marionette');
var ChildView = Mn.View.extend({
initialize: function(options) {
console.log(options.foo); // => "bar"
}
});
var CollectionView = Mn.CollectionView.extend({
childView: ChildView,
childViewOptions: {
foo: 'bar'
}
});
You can also specify the childViewOptions as a function, if you need to
calculate the values to return at runtime. The model will be passed into
the function should you need access to it when calculating
childViewOptions. The function must return an object, and the attributes
of the object will be copied to the childView instance's options.
var Mn = require('backbone.marionette');
var CollectionView = Mn.CollectionView.extend({
childViewOptions: function(model, index) {
// do some calculations based on the model
return {
foo: 'bar',
childIndex: index
}
}
});
emptyViewWhen a collection has no children, and you need to render a view other than
the list of childViews, you can specify an emptyView attribute on your
collection view. The emptyView just like the childView can also be passed as an option on instantiation or can be a
function that returns the emptyView.
var Mn = require('backbone.marionette');
var MyEmptyView = Mn.View.extend({
template: _.template('Nothing to display.')
});
var MyCollectionView = Mn.CollectionView.extend({
// ...
emptyView: MyEmptyView
});
emptyViewOptionsSimilar to childView and childViewOptions,
there is an emptyViewOptions property that will be passed to the emptyView constructor.
It can be provided as an object literal or as a function.
If emptyViewOptions aren't provided the CollectionView will default to passing the childViewOptions to the emptyView.
var Mn = require('backbone.marionette');
var EmptyView = Mn.View({
initialize: function(options){
console.log(options.foo); // => "bar"
}
});
var CollectionView = Mn.CollectionView({
emptyView: EmptyView,
emptyViewOptions: {
foo: 'bar'
}
});
isEmptyIf you want to control when the empty view is rendered, you can override
isEmpty:
var Mn = require('backbone.marionette');
var MyCollectionView = Mn.CollectionView.extend({
isEmpty: function(options) {
// some logic to calculate if the view should be rendered as empty
return this.collection.length < 2;
}
});
renderThe render method of the collection view is responsible for
rendering the entire collection. It loops through each of the
children in the collection and renders them individually as a
childView. By default when a collectionView is fully rendered it buffers the DOM changes for a single attachBuffer DOM change.
var Mn = require('backbone.marionette');
var MyCollectionView = Mn.CollectionView.extend({...});
// all of the children views will now be rendered.
new MyCollectionView().render();
For more information on rendering techiniques see: Rendering CollectionViews.
After the initial render the collection view binds to the add, remove and
reset events of the collection that is specified.
When the collection for the view is "reset", the view will call render on
itself and re-render the entire collection.
When a model is added to the collection, the collection view will render that one model in to the collection of child views.
When a model is removed from a collection (or destroyed / deleted), the collection view will destroy and remove that model's child view.
When the collection for the view is sorted, the view will automatically re-sort its child views.
If the reorderOnSort option is set it will attempt to reorder the DOM and do this without a full re-render, otherwise it will re-render if the order has changed. Please Note that if you apply a filter to the collection view and the filtered views change during a sort then it will always re-render.
var Bb = require('backbone');
var Mn = require('backbone.marionette');
var collection = new Bb.Collection();
var MyChildView = Mn.View.extend({
template: _.noop
});
var MyCollectionView = Mn.CollectionView.extend({
childView: MyChildView,
collection: collection,
});
var myCollectionView = new MyCollectionView();
// Collection view will not re-render as it has not been rendered
collection.reset([{foo: 'foo'}]);
myCollectionView.render();
// Collection view will re-render displaying the new model
collection.reset([{foo: 'bar'}]);
If you need to re-render the entire collection, you can call the
view.render method. This method takes care of destroying all of
the child views that may have previously been opened.
attachHtmlBy default the collection view will append the HTML of each ChildView
into the element buffer, and then call jQuery's .append once at the
end to move the HTML into the collection view's el.
You can override this by specifying an attachHtml method in your
view definition. This method takes three parameters and has no return
value.
var Mn = require('backbone.marionette');
Mn.CollectionView.extend({
// The default implementation:
attachHtml: function(collectionView, childView, index){
if (collectionView._isBuffering) {
// buffering happens on reset events and initial renders
// in order to reduce the number of inserts into the
// document, which are expensive.
collectionView._bufferedChildren.splice(index, 0, childView);
} else {
// If we've already rendered the main collection, append
// the new child into the correct order if we need to. Otherwise
// append to the end.
if (!collectionView._insertBefore(childView, index)){
collectionView._insertAfter(childView);
}
}
}
});
The first parameter is the instance of the collection view that will receive the HTML from the second parameter, the current child view instance.
The third parameter, index, is the index of the
model that this childView instance represents, in the collection
that the model came from. This is useful for understanding the sort order of the children.
Overrides of attachHtml that don't take into account the element
buffer will work fine, but won't take advantage of the 60x performance
increase the buffer provides.
attachBufferWhen overriding attachHtml it may be necessary to also override how the buffer is attached. This method receives two parameters. The collectionView and the buffer HTML of all of the child views.
var Mn = require('backbone.marionette');
var MyCollectionView = Mn.CollectionView.extend({
// The default implementation:
// Called after all children have been appended into the buffer
attachBuffer: function(collectionView, buffer) {
collectionView.$el.append(buffer);
}
});
destroyCollectionView implements a destroy method which automatically
destroys its children and cleans up listeners.
var Bb = require('backbone');
var Mn = require('backbone.marionette');
var MyChildView = Mn.View.extend({
template: _.template('ChildView'),
onDestroy: function() {
console.log('I will get destroyed');
}
})
var myCollectionView = new Mn.CollectionView({
childView: MyChildView,
collection: new Bb.Collection([{ id: 1 }])
});
myCollectionView.render();
myCollectionView.destroy(); // logs "I will get destroyed"
The CollectionView, like View, is able to trigger and respond to events
occurring during their lifecycle. The Documentation for Events
has the complete documentation for how to set and handle events on views.
The collection view is able to monitor and act on events on any children they
own using childViewEvents and childViewTriggers. Additionally when a child
view triggers an event, that event will bubble up one level to the parent
collection view. For an example:
var Mn = require('backbone.marionette');
var Item = Mn.View.extend({
tagName: 'li',
triggers: {
'click a': 'select:item'
}
});
var Collection = Mn.CollectionView.extend({
tagName: 'ul',
onChildviewSelectItem: function(childView) {
console.log('item selected: ' + childView.model.id);
}
});
The event will receive a childview: prefix before going through the magic
method binding logic. See the
documentation for Child View Events for more
information.
The CollectionView contains its own lifecycle events, on top of the regular
View event lifecycle. For more information on what these are, and how to use
them, see the
Documentation on CollectionView lifecycle events
CollectionViewsMarionette 3 has deprecated the CompositeView (for removal in v4) in favor of making the
View and CollectionView a lot more flexible. This section will cover the
most common use cases for CollectionView and how to replace CompositeView.
Lists are possibly the simplest use of CollectionView - simply set a
childView option:
var Bb = require('backbone');
var Mn = require('backbone.marionette');
var ListItemView = Mn.View.extend({
tagName: 'li',
template: '#list-item-text'
});
var ListView = Mn.CollectionView.extend({
tagName: 'ul',
className: 'list-unstyled',
childView: ListItemView
});
var list = new Bb.Collection([
{id: 1, text: 'My text'},
{id: 2, text: 'Another Item'}
]);
var listView = new ListView({
collection: list
});
listview.render();
With the template:
<%- text %>
This will render the following:
<ul class="list-unstyled">
<li>My text</li>
<li>Another Item</li>
</ul>
Marionette 3 introduced a major improvement to View to make it possible to
implement tables using only View and CollectionView. This section will
demonstrate how to build a table in Marionette 3, with the equivalent in
Marionette 2 using CompositeView.
Note The following code is deprecated and for demonstration purposes only
To build a table in Marionette 2 requires the CompositeView which we'll build
as such:
var Bb = require('backbone');
var Mn = require('backbone.marionette');
var RowView = Mn.LayoutView.extend({
tagName: 'tr',
template: '#table-row'
});
var TableView = Mn.CompositeView.extend({
tagName: 'table',
className: 'table table-hover',
template: '#table',
childView: RowView,
childViewContainer: 'tbody'
});
var list = new Bb.Collection([
{id: 1, text: 'My text'},
{id: 2, text: 'Another Item'}
]);
var myTable = new TableView({
collection: list
});
myTable.render();
Given the following #table and #table-row templates:
<thead>
<tr>
<th>ID</th>
<th>Body</th>
</tr>
</thead>
<tbody></tbody>
<td><%- id %></td>
<td><%- text %></td>
Will render the following:
<table class="table table-hover">
<thead>
<tr>
<th>ID</th>
<th>Body</th>
</tr>
</thead>
<tbody>
<tr>
<td>1</td>
<td>My text</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>2</td>
<td>Another Item</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
###
A major downside of this method was that it was impossible to add extra regions
inside the CompositeView - if a header item needed to be re-rendered based on
user input, then the entire table must be re-rendered, or the DOM must be
manipulated with ui items.
To resolve this issue, Marionette 3 improves the View to make it possible to
build tables without CompositeView.
Marionette 3 doesn't use CompositeView any more. We now build tables using
Views and regions. The following code will render the same table as in
Marionette 2:
var Bb = require('backbone');
var Mn = require('backbone.marionette');
var RowView = Mn.View.extend({
tagName: 'tr',
template: '#row-template'
});
var TableBody = Mn.CollectionView.extend({
tagName: 'tbody',
childView: RowView
});
var TableView = Mn.View.extend({
tagName: 'table',
className: 'table table-hover',
template: '#table',
regions: {
body: {
el: 'tbody',
replaceElement: true
}
},
onRender: function() {
this.showChildView('body', new TableBody({
collection: this.collection
}));
}
});
var list = new Bb.Collection([
{id: 1, text: 'My text'},
{id: 2, text: 'Another Item'}
]);
var myTable = new TableView({
collection: list
});
myTable.render();
We can leave the templates as-is for this example. The major advantage of this
style is that we can create a region in any part of TableView as well as in
RowView and treat it just as any independent widget.
Tree structures are extremely useful layouts for nesting the same type of data over and over. A common example of this would be the Windows Explorer file picker.
var Bb = require('backbone');
var Mn = require('backbone.marionette');
var TreeView = Mn.CompositeView.extend({
tagName: 'ul',
template: '#tree-template'
});
var TreeRoot = Mn.CollectionView.extend({
tagName: 'ul',
childView: TreeView
});
var tree = new Bb.Collection([
{
id: 5,
nodes: [
{id: 9, nodes: []},
{id: 1, nodes: [...]}
],
},
{
id: 12,
nodes: []
}
]);
new TreeRoot({
collection: tree
});
In Marionette 2, the CompositeView defaults to setting childView to itself.
While good for building tree structures, this behavior changed for Marionette 3
with the introduction of a more general view.
As in tables, trees in Marionette 3 require us to combine View and
CollectionView to build up the tree in a more explicit manner than the
implicit version provided by Marionette 2.
var Bb = require('backbone');
var Mn = require('backbone.marionette');
var TreeNode = Mn.View.extend({
tagName: 'li',
template: '#tree-template',
regions: {
tree: {
el: 'ul',
replaceElement: true
}
},
onRender: function() {
var nodes = this.model.get('nodes');
//show child nodes if they are present
if (nodes.length) {
var treeView = new TreeView({
collection: new Bb.Collection(nodes)
});
this.showChildView('tree', treeView);
}
}
});
var TreeView = Mn.CollectionView.extend({
tagName: 'ul',
childView: TreeNode
});
var tree = new Bb.Collection([
{
id: 5,
nodes: [
{id: 9, nodes: []},
{id: 1, nodes: [...]}
],
},
{
id: 12,
nodes: []
}
]);
new TreeView({
collection: tree
});
This more explicit style gives us two major benefits:
CompositeViewFor getting advanced information about filtering, sorting or managing CollectionView look at
Advanced CollectionView usage
The CollectionView can store and manage its child views. This allows you to easily access
the views within the collection view, iterate them, find them by a given indexer such as the
view's model or collection, and more. Additional Information...
CollectionView allows for a custom filter option if you want to prevent some of the
underlying collection's models from being rendered as child views. Additional Information...
By default the CollectionView will maintain a sorted collection's order in the DOM.
Additional Information...