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Usage gon.rabl with Backbone.js
Backbone.js relieved rails' controller by rending templates in javascript. Rails then become more backend oriented providing data interface in JSON.
RABL enables the user to format JSON easily.
Gon is an elegant preload data solution in this combination. It saves an ajax call by preloading the data into the page(you don't have to get data from backbone model/collection any more in most cases).
Original:
- HTTP request => 2. Rails routes => 3. Rails controller logic code and render the view => 4. trigger backbone => 5. Render backbone template and send ajax call to get data -> 6. Update html code generated by template when ajax returns data
Using gon.rabl
- HTTP request => 2. Rails routes => 3. Rails controller logic code, render the view, and generates json according to rabl template => 4. Trigger backbone => 5. Render template directly with gon data
Preloading data into pages will save a request with server and quicken the page load processing.
pages_controller.rb
def show
@user = User.find(params[:id])
gon.rabl
end
show.json.rabl
@object user
attributes :username, :gender
node(:followers_count) { |user| user.followers.count } # Just an example here, it's better to have a count filed in model
sample_router.coffee
class Sample.Routers.SampleRouter extends Backbone.Router
routes:
"users/:id/show" : "showUser"
showUser: ->
user = new Sample.Models.User(gon.user)
userView = new Sample.Views.User(model: user)
$("body").html(userView.render().el)
Rabl allows you to exclude the root by setting.
# config.include_json_root = false
config.include_child_root = false
Here I just disabled the child root because if you disabled the json root, everything you put to Gon will be like
gon.username = "john doe"; gon.gender = "male"...
instead of
gon.user = { username: "john doe", gender: "male" }
This example provided by @yujingz