Class Route
publicimport Route from '@ember/routing/route';
The Route
class is used to define individual routes. Refer to
the routing guide for documentation.
activate (transition) public
Defined in packages/@ember/routing/route.ts:851
Available since v1.0.0
- transition
- Transition
This hook is executed when the router enters the route. It is not executed when the model for the route changes.
addObserver (key, target, method, sync) Observable public
Inherited from Observable packages/@ember/object/observable.ts:251
- key
- String
The key to observe
- target
- Object
The target object to invoke
- method
- String|Function
The method to invoke
- sync
- Boolean
Whether the observer is sync or not
- returns
- Observable
Adds an observer on a property.
This is the core method used to register an observer for a property.
Once you call this method, any time the key's value is set, your observer will be notified. Note that the observers are triggered any time the value is set, regardless of whether it has actually changed. Your observer should be prepared to handle that.
There are two common invocation patterns for .addObserver()
:
- Passing two arguments:
- the name of the property to observe (as a string)
- the function to invoke (an actual function)
- Passing three arguments:
- the name of the property to observe (as a string)
- the target object (will be used to look up and invoke a function on)
- the name of the function to invoke on the target object (as a string).
import Component from '@ember/component';
export default Component.extend({
init() {
this._super(...arguments);
// the following are equivalent:
// using three arguments
this.addObserver('foo', this, 'fooDidChange');
// using two arguments
this.addObserver('foo', (...args) => {
this.fooDidChange(...args);
});
},
fooDidChange() {
// your custom logic code
}
});
Observer Methods
Observer methods have the following signature:
import Component from '@ember/component';
export default Component.extend({
init() {
this._super(...arguments);
this.addObserver('foo', this, 'fooDidChange');
},
fooDidChange(sender, key, value, rev) {
// your code
}
});
The sender
is the object that changed. The key
is the property that
changes. The value
property is currently reserved and unused. The rev
is the last property revision of the object when it changed, which you can
use to detect if the key value has really changed or not.
Usually you will not need the value or revision parameters at the end. In this case, it is common to write observer methods that take only a sender and key value as parameters or, if you aren't interested in any of these values, to write an observer that has no parameters at all.
afterModel (resolvedModel, transition) Any | Promise<any> public
Defined in packages/@ember/routing/route.ts:1020
Available since v1.0.0
- resolvedModel
- Object
the value returned from
model
, or its resolved value if it was a promise- transition
- Transition
- returns
- Any | Promise<any>
if the value returned from this hook is a promise, the transition will pause until the transition resolves. Otherwise, non-promise return values are not utilized in any way.
This hook is called after this route's model has resolved.
It follows identical async/promise semantics to beforeModel
but is provided the route's resolved model in addition to
the transition
, and is therefore suited to performing
logic that can only take place after the model has already
resolved.
import Route from '@ember/routing/route';
import { service } from '@ember/service';
export default class PostsRoute extends Route {
@service router;
afterModel(posts, transition) {
if (posts.get('length') === 1) {
this.router.transitionTo('post.show', posts.get('firstObject'));
}
}
}
Refer to documentation for beforeModel
for a description
of transition-pausing semantics when a promise is returned
from this hook.
beforeModel (transition) Any | Promise<any> public
Defined in packages/@ember/routing/route.ts:985
Available since v1.0.0
- transition
- Transition
- returns
- Any | Promise<any>
if the value returned from this hook is a promise, the transition will pause until the transition resolves. Otherwise, non-promise return values are not utilized in any way.
This hook is the first of the route entry validation hooks
called when an attempt is made to transition into a route
or one of its children. It is called before model
and
afterModel
, and is appropriate for cases when:
1) A decision can be made to redirect elsewhere without needing to resolve the model first. 2) Any async operations need to occur first before the model is attempted to be resolved.
This hook is provided the current transition
attempt
as a parameter, which can be used to .abort()
the transition,
save it for a later .retry()
, or retrieve values set
on it from a previous hook. You can also just call
router.transitionTo
to another route to implicitly
abort the transition
.
You can return a promise from this hook to pause the transition until the promise resolves (or rejects). This could be useful, for instance, for retrieving async code from the server that is required to enter a route.
buildRouteInfoMetadata public
Defined in packages/@ember/routing/route.ts:1490
Available since v3.10.0
- returns
any
Allows you to produce custom metadata for the route. The return value of this method will be attached to its corresponding RouteInfoWithAttributes object.
Example
import Route from '@ember/routing/route';
export default class PostsIndexRoute extends Route {
buildRouteInfoMetadata() {
return { title: 'Posts Page' }
}
}
import Route from '@ember/routing/route';
import { service } from '@ember/service';
export default class ApplicationRoute extends Route {
@service router
constructor() {
super(...arguments);
this.router.on('routeDidChange', transition => {
document.title = transition.to.metadata.title;
// would update document's title to "Posts Page"
});
}
}
cacheFor (keyName) Object public
Inherited from Observable packages/@ember/object/observable.ts:407
- keyName
- String
- returns
- Object
The cached value of the computed property, if any
Returns the cached value of a computed property, if it exists. This allows you to inspect the value of a computed property without accidentally invoking it if it is intended to be generated lazily.
controllerFor (name) Controller | undefined public
Defined in packages/@ember/routing/route.ts:1308
Available since v1.0.0
- name
- String
the name of the route or controller
- returns
- Controller | undefined
Returns the controller of the current route, or a parent (or any ancestor) route in a route hierarchy.
The controller instance must already have been created, either through entering the
associated route or using generateController
.
import Route from '@ember/routing/route';
export default class PostRoute extends Route {
setupController(controller, post) {
super.setupController(controller, post);
this.controllerFor('posts').set('currentPost', post);
}
}
deactivate (transition) public
Defined in packages/@ember/routing/route.ts:840
Available since v1.0.0
- transition
- Transition
This hook is executed when the router completely exits this route. It is not executed when the model for the route changes.
decrementProperty (keyName, decrement) Number public
Inherited from Observable packages/@ember/object/observable.ts:375
- keyName
- String
The name of the property to decrement
- decrement
- Number
The amount to decrement by. Defaults to 1
- returns
- Number
The new property value
Set the value of a property to the current value minus some amount.
player.decrementProperty('lives');
orc.decrementProperty('health', 5);
destroy EmberObject public
Inherited from CoreObject packages/@ember/object/core.ts:540
- returns
- EmberObject
receiver
Destroys an object by setting the isDestroyed
flag and removing its
metadata, which effectively destroys observers and bindings.
If you try to set a property on a destroyed object, an exception will be raised.
Note that destruction is scheduled for the end of the run loop and does not happen immediately. It will set an isDestroying flag immediately.
get (keyName) Object public
Inherited from Observable packages/@ember/object/observable.ts:97
- keyName
- String
The property to retrieve
- returns
- Object
The property value or undefined.
Retrieves the value of a property from the object.
This method is usually similar to using object[keyName]
or object.keyName
,
however it supports both computed properties and the unknownProperty
handler.
Because get
unifies the syntax for accessing all these kinds
of properties, it can make many refactorings easier, such as replacing a
simple property with a computed property, or vice versa.
Computed Properties
Computed properties are methods defined with the property
modifier
declared at the end, such as:
import { computed } from '@ember/object';
fullName: computed('firstName', 'lastName', function() {
return this.get('firstName') + ' ' + this.get('lastName');
})
When you call get
on a computed property, the function will be
called and the return value will be returned instead of the function
itself.
Unknown Properties
Likewise, if you try to call get
on a property whose value is
undefined
, the unknownProperty()
method will be called on the object.
If this method returns any value other than undefined
, it will be returned
instead. This allows you to implement "virtual" properties that are
not defined upfront.
getProperties (list) Object public
Inherited from Observable packages/@ember/object/observable.ts:141
- list
- String...|Array
of keys to get
- returns
- Object
To get the values of multiple properties at once, call getProperties
with a list of strings or an array:
record.getProperties('firstName', 'lastName', 'zipCode');
// { firstName: 'John', lastName: 'Doe', zipCode: '10011' }
is equivalent to:
record.getProperties(['firstName', 'lastName', 'zipCode']);
// { firstName: 'John', lastName: 'Doe', zipCode: '10011' }
has (name) Boolean public
Inherited from Evented packages/@ember/object/evented.ts:137
- name
- String
The name of the event
- returns
- Boolean
does the object have a subscription for event
Checks to see if object has any subscriptions for named event.
incrementProperty (keyName, increment) Number public
Inherited from Observable packages/@ember/object/observable.ts:358
- keyName
- String
The name of the property to increment
- increment
- Number
The amount to increment by. Defaults to 1
- returns
- Number
The new property value
Set the value of a property to the current value plus some amount.
person.incrementProperty('age');
team.incrementProperty('score', 2);
init public
Inherited from CoreObject packages/@ember/object/core.ts:321
An overridable method called when objects are instantiated. By default, does nothing unless it is overridden during class definition.
Example:
import EmberObject from '@ember/object';
const Person = EmberObject.extend({
init() {
alert(`Name is ${this.get('name')}`);
}
});
let steve = Person.create({
name: 'Steve'
});
// alerts 'Name is Steve'.
NOTE: If you do override init
for a framework class like Component
from @ember/component
, be sure to call this._super(...arguments)
in your init
declaration!
If you don't, Ember may not have an opportunity to
do important setup work, and you'll see strange behavior in your
application.
intermediateTransitionTo (name, models) public
Defined in packages/@ember/routing/route.ts:862
Available since v1.2.0
- name
- String
the name of the route
- models
- ...Object
the model(s) to be used while transitioning to the route.
Perform a synchronous transition into another route without attempting
to resolve promises, update the URL, or abort any currently active
asynchronous transitions (i.e. regular transitions caused by
transitionTo
or URL changes).
This method is handy for performing intermediate transitions on the
way to a final destination route, and is called internally by the
default implementations of the error
and loading
handlers.
model (params, transition) Any | Promise<any> public
Defined in packages/@ember/routing/route.ts:1099
Available since v1.0.0
- params
- Object
the parameters extracted from the URL
- transition
- Transition
- returns
- Any | Promise<any>
the model for this route. If a promise is returned, the transition will pause until the promise resolves, and the resolved value of the promise will be used as the model for this route.
A hook you can implement to convert the URL into the model for this route.
// ...
Router.map(function() {
this.route('post', { path: '/posts/:post_id' });
});
export default Router;
Note that for routes with dynamic segments, this hook is not always
executed. If the route is entered through a transition (e.g. when
using the link-to
Handlebars helper or the transitionTo
method
of routes), and a model context is already provided this hook
is not called.
A model context does not include a primitive string or number, which does cause the model hook to be called.
Routes without dynamic segments will always execute the model hook.
// no dynamic segment, model hook always called
this.router.transitionTo('posts');
// model passed in, so model hook not called
thePost = store.findRecord('post', 1);
this.router.transitionTo('post', thePost);
// integer passed in, model hook is called
this.router.transitionTo('post', 1);
// model id passed in, model hook is called
// useful for forcing the hook to execute
thePost = store.findRecord('post', 1);
this.router.transitionTo('post', thePost.id);
This hook follows the asynchronous/promise semantics
described in the documentation for beforeModel
. In particular,
if a promise returned from model
fails, the error will be
handled by the error
hook on Route
.
Note that the legacy behavior of automatically defining a model
hook when a dynamic segment ending in _id
is present is
deprecated.
You should explicitly define a model hook whenever any segments are
present.
Example
import Route from '@ember/routing/route';
import { service } from '@ember/service';
export default class PostRoute extends Route {
@service store;
model(params) {
return this.store.findRecord('post', params.post_id);
}
}
modelFor (name) Object public
Defined in packages/@ember/routing/route.ts:1390
Available since v1.0.0
- name
- String
the name of the route
- returns
- Object
the model object
Returns the resolved model of a parent (or any ancestor) route
in a route hierarchy. During a transition, all routes
must resolve a model object, and if a route
needs access to a parent route's model in order to
resolve a model (or just reuse the model from a parent),
it can call this.modelFor(theNameOfParentRoute)
to
retrieve it. If the ancestor route's model was a promise,
its resolved result is returned.
Example
// ...
Router.map(function() {
this.route('post', { path: '/posts/:post_id' }, function() {
this.route('comments');
});
});
export default Router;
import Route from '@ember/routing/route';
export default class PostCommentsRoute extends Route {
model() {
let post = this.modelFor('post');
return post.comments;
}
}
notifyPropertyChange (keyName) Observable public
Inherited from Observable packages/@ember/object/observable.ts:233
- keyName
- String
The property key to be notified about.
- returns
- Observable
Convenience method to call propertyWillChange
and propertyDidChange
in
succession.
Notify the observer system that a property has just changed.
Sometimes you need to change a value directly or indirectly without
actually calling get()
or set()
on it. In this case, you can use this
method instead. Calling this method will notify all observers that the
property has potentially changed value.
off (name, target, method) public
Inherited from Evented packages/@ember/object/evented.ts:121
- name
- String
The name of the event
- target
- Object
The target of the subscription
- method
- Function|String
The function or the name of a function of the subscription
- returns
this
Cancels subscription for given name, target, and method.
on (name, target, method) public
Inherited from Evented packages/@ember/object/evented.ts:51
- name
- String
The name of the event
- target
- Object
The "this" binding for the callback
- method
- Function|String
A function or the name of a function to be called on
target
- returns
this
Subscribes to a named event with given function.
person.on('didLoad', function() {
// fired once the person has loaded
});
An optional target can be passed in as the 2nd argument that will be set as the "this" for the callback. This is a good way to give your function access to the object triggering the event. When the target parameter is used the callback method becomes the third argument.
one (name, target, method) public
Inherited from Evented packages/@ember/object/evented.ts:78
- name
- String
The name of the event
- target
- Object
The "this" binding for the callback
- method
- Function|String
A function or the name of a function to be called on
target
- returns
this
Subscribes a function to a named event and then cancels the subscription
after the first time the event is triggered. It is good to use one
when
you only care about the first time an event has taken place.
This function takes an optional 2nd argument that will become the "this" value for the callback. When the target parameter is used the callback method becomes the third argument.
paramsFor (name) Object public
Defined in packages/@ember/routing/route.ts:594
Available since v1.4.0
- name
- String
- returns
- Object
hash containing the parameters of the route
name
Returns a hash containing the parameters of an ancestor route.
You may notice that this.paramsFor
sometimes works when referring to a
child route, but this behavior should not be relied upon as only ancestor
routes are certain to be loaded in time.
Example
// ...
Router.map(function() {
this.route('member', { path: ':name' }, function() {
this.route('interest', { path: ':interest' });
});
});
import Route from '@ember/routing/route';
export default class MemberRoute extends Route {
queryParams = {
memberQp: { refreshModel: true }
}
}
import Route from '@ember/routing/route';
export default class MemberInterestRoute extends Route {
queryParams = {
interestQp: { refreshModel: true }
}
model() {
return this.paramsFor('member');
}
}
If we visit /turing/maths?memberQp=member&interestQp=interest
the model for
the member.interest
route is a hash with:
name
:turing
memberQp
:member
redirect (model, transition) public
Defined in packages/@ember/routing/route.ts:1064
Available since v1.0.0
- model
- Object
the model for this route
- transition
- Transition
the transition object associated with the current transition
A hook you can implement to optionally redirect to another route.
Calling this.router.transitionTo
from inside of the redirect
hook will
abort the current transition (into the route that has implemented redirect
).
redirect
and afterModel
behave very similarly and are
called almost at the same time, but they have an important
distinction when calling this.router.transitionTo
to a child route
of the current route. From afterModel
, this new transition
invalidates the current transition, causing beforeModel
,
model
, and afterModel
hooks to be called again. But the
same transition started from redirect
does not invalidate
the current transition. In other words, by the time the redirect
hook has been called, both the resolved model and the attempted
entry into this route are considered fully validated.
refresh Transition public
Defined in packages/@ember/routing/route.ts:884
Available since v1.4.0
- returns
- Transition
the transition object associated with this attempted transition
Refresh the model on this route and any child routes, firing the
beforeModel
, model
, and afterModel
hooks in a similar fashion
to how routes are entered when transitioning in from other route.
The current route params (e.g. article_id
) will be passed in
to the respective model hooks, and if a different model is returned,
setupController
and associated route hooks will re-fire as well.
An example usage of this method is re-querying the server for the latest information using the same parameters as when the route was first entered.
Note that this will cause model
hooks to fire even on routes
that were provided a model object when the route was initially
entered.
removeObserver (key, target, method, sync) Observable public
Inherited from Observable packages/@ember/object/observable.ts:337
- key
- String
The key to observe
- target
- Object
The target object to invoke
- method
- String|Function
The method to invoke
- sync
- Boolean
Whether the observer is async or not
- returns
- Observable
Remove an observer you have previously registered on this object. Pass
the same key, target, and method you passed to addObserver()
and your
target will no longer receive notifications.
resetController (controller, isExiting, transition) public
Defined in packages/@ember/routing/route.ts:734
Available since v1.7.0
- controller
- Controller
instance
- isExiting
- Boolean
- transition
- Object
A hook you can use to reset controller values either when the model changes or the route is exiting.
import Route from '@ember/routing/route';
export default class ArticlesRoute extends Route {
resetController(controller, isExiting, transition) {
if (isExiting && transition.targetName !== 'error') {
controller.set('page', 1);
}
}
}
send (name, args) public
Defined in packages/@ember/routing/route.ts:1729
Available since v1.0.0
- name
- String
the name of the action to trigger
- args
- ...*
Sends an action to the router, which will delegate it to the currently
active route hierarchy per the bubbling rules explained under actions
.
Example
// ...
Router.map(function() {
this.route('index');
});
export default Router;
import Route from '@ember/routing/route';
import { action } from '@ember/object';
export default class ApplicationRoute extends Route {
@action
track(arg) {
console.log(arg, 'was clicked');
}
}
import Route from '@ember/routing/route';
import { action } from '@ember/object';
export default class IndexRoute extends Route {
@action
trackIfDebug(arg) {
if (debug) {
this.send('track', arg);
}
}
}
serialize (model, params) Object public
Defined in packages/@ember/routing/route.ts:291
Available since v1.0.0
- model
- Object
the routes model
- params
- Array
an Array of parameter names for the current route (in the example,
['post_id']
.- returns
- Object
the serialized parameters
A hook you can implement to convert the route's model into parameters for the URL.
// ...
Router.map(function() {
this.route('post', { path: '/posts/:post_id' });
});
import Route from '@ember/routing/route';
export default class PostRoute extends Route {
model({ post_id }) {
// the server returns `{ id: 12 }`
return fetch(`/posts/${post_id}`;
}
serialize(model) {
// this will make the URL `/posts/12`
return { post_id: model.id };
}
}
The default serialize
method will insert the model's id
into the
route's dynamic segment (in this case, :post_id
) if the segment contains 'id'.
If the route has multiple dynamic segments or does not contain 'id', serialize
will return getProperties(model, params)
This method is called when transitionTo
is called with a context
in order to populate the URL.
set (keyName, value) Object public
Inherited from Observable packages/@ember/object/observable.ts:168
- keyName
- String
The property to set
- value
- Object
The value to set or
null
.- returns
- Object
The passed value
Sets the provided key or path to the value.
record.set("key", value);
This method is generally very similar to calling object["key"] = value
or
object.key = value
, except that it provides support for computed
properties, the setUnknownProperty()
method and property observers.
Computed Properties
If you try to set a value on a key that has a computed property handler
defined (see the get()
method for an example), then set()
will call
that method, passing both the value and key instead of simply changing
the value itself. This is useful for those times when you need to
implement a property that is composed of one or more member
properties.
Unknown Properties
If you try to set a value on a key that is undefined in the target
object, then the setUnknownProperty()
handler will be called instead. This
gives you an opportunity to implement complex "virtual" properties that
are not predefined on the object. If setUnknownProperty()
returns
undefined, then set()
will simply set the value on the object.
Property Observers
In addition to changing the property, set()
will also register a property
change with the object. Unless you have placed this call inside of a
beginPropertyChanges()
and endPropertyChanges(),
any "local" observers
(i.e. observer methods declared on the same object), will be called
immediately. Any "remote" observers (i.e. observer methods declared on
another object) will be placed in a queue and called at a later time in a
coalesced manner.
setProperties (hash) Object public
Inherited from Observable packages/@ember/object/observable.ts:216
- hash
- Object
the hash of keys and values to set
- returns
- Object
The passed in hash
Sets a list of properties at once. These properties are set inside
a single beginPropertyChanges
and endPropertyChanges
batch, so
observers will be buffered.
record.setProperties({ firstName: 'Charles', lastName: 'Jolley' });
setupController (controller, model, transition) public
Defined in packages/@ember/routing/route.ts:1229
Available since v1.0.0
- controller
- Controller
instance
- model
- Object
- transition
- Transition
A hook you can use to setup the controller for the current route.
This method is called with the controller for the current route and the
model supplied by the model
hook.
By default, the setupController
hook sets the model
property of
the controller to the specified model
when it is not undefined
.
If you implement the setupController
hook in your Route, it will
prevent this default behavior. If you want to preserve that behavior
when implementing your setupController
function, make sure to call
super
:
import Route from '@ember/routing/route';
import { service } from '@ember/service';
export default class PhotosRoute extends Route {
@service store;
model() {
return this.store.findAll('photo');
}
setupController(controller, model) {
super.setupController(controller, model);
this.controllerFor('application').set('showingPhotos', true);
}
}
The provided controller will be one resolved based on the name of this route.
If no explicit controller is defined, Ember will automatically create one.
As an example, consider the router:
// ...
Router.map(function() {
this.route('post', { path: '/posts/:post_id' });
});
export default Router;
If you have defined a file for the post controller,
the framework will use it.
If it is not defined, a basic Controller
instance would be used.
toString String public
Inherited from CoreObject packages/@ember/object/core.ts:575
- returns
- String
string representation
Returns a string representation which attempts to provide more information
than Javascript's toString
typically does, in a generic way for all Ember
objects.
import EmberObject from '@ember/object';
const Person = EmberObject.extend();
person = Person.create();
person.toString(); //=> "<Person:ember1024>"
If the object's class is not defined on an Ember namespace, it will indicate it is a subclass of the registered superclass:
const Student = Person.extend();
let student = Student.create();
student.toString(); //=> "<(subclass of Person):ember1025>"
If the method toStringExtension
is defined, its return value will be
included in the output.
const Teacher = Person.extend({
toStringExtension() {
return this.get('fullName');
}
});
teacher = Teacher.create();
teacher.toString(); //=> "<Teacher:ember1026:Tom Dale>"
toggleProperty (keyName) Boolean public
Inherited from Observable packages/@ember/object/observable.ts:392
- keyName
- String
The name of the property to toggle
- returns
- Boolean
The new property value
Set the value of a boolean property to the opposite of its current value.
starship.toggleProperty('warpDriveEngaged');
trigger (name, args) public
Inherited from Evented packages/@ember/object/evented.ts:100
- name
- String
The name of the event
- args
- Object...
Optional arguments to pass on
Triggers a named event for the object. Any additional arguments will be passed as parameters to the functions that are subscribed to the event.
person.on('didEat', function(food) {
console.log('person ate some ' + food);
});
person.trigger('didEat', 'broccoli');
// outputs: person ate some broccoli
willDestroy public
Inherited from CoreObject packages/@ember/object/core.ts:567
Override to implement teardown.
concatenatedProperties public
Inherited from CoreObject packages/@ember/object/core.ts:355
Defines the properties that will be concatenated from the superclass (instead of overridden).
By default, when you extend an Ember class a property defined in
the subclass overrides a property with the same name that is defined
in the superclass. However, there are some cases where it is preferable
to build up a property's value by combining the superclass' property
value with the subclass' value. An example of this in use within Ember
is the classNames
property of Component
from @ember/component
.
Here is some sample code showing the difference between a concatenated property and a normal one:
import EmberObject from '@ember/object';
const Bar = EmberObject.extend({
// Configure which properties to concatenate
concatenatedProperties: ['concatenatedProperty'],
someNonConcatenatedProperty: ['bar'],
concatenatedProperty: ['bar']
});
const FooBar = Bar.extend({
someNonConcatenatedProperty: ['foo'],
concatenatedProperty: ['foo']
});
let fooBar = FooBar.create();
fooBar.get('someNonConcatenatedProperty'); // ['foo']
fooBar.get('concatenatedProperty'); // ['bar', 'foo']
This behavior extends to object creation as well. Continuing the above example:
let fooBar = FooBar.create({
someNonConcatenatedProperty: ['baz'],
concatenatedProperty: ['baz']
})
fooBar.get('someNonConcatenatedProperty'); // ['baz']
fooBar.get('concatenatedProperty'); // ['bar', 'foo', 'baz']
Adding a single property that is not an array will just add it in the array:
let fooBar = FooBar.create({
concatenatedProperty: 'baz'
})
view.get('concatenatedProperty'); // ['bar', 'foo', 'baz']
Using the concatenatedProperties
property, we can tell Ember to mix the
content of the properties.
In Component
the classNames
, classNameBindings
and
attributeBindings
properties are concatenated.
This feature is available for you to use throughout the Ember object model, although typical app developers are likely to use it infrequently. Since it changes expectations about behavior of properties, you should properly document its usage in each individual concatenated property (to not mislead your users to think they can override the property in a subclass).
controller public
Defined in packages/@ember/routing/route.ts:468
Available since v1.6.0
The controller associated with this route.
Example
import Route from '@ember/routing/route';
import { action } from '@ember/object';
export default class FormRoute extends Route {
@action
willTransition(transition) {
if (this.controller.get('userHasEnteredData') &&
!confirm('Are you sure you want to abandon progress?')) {
transition.abort();
} else {
// Bubble the `willTransition` action so that
// parent routes can decide whether or not to abort.
return true;
}
}
}
controllerName public
Defined in packages/@ember/routing/route.ts:445
Available since v1.4.0
The name of the controller to associate with this route.
By default, Ember will lookup a route's controller that matches the name
of the route (i.e. posts.new
). However,
if you would like to define a specific controller to use, you can do so
using this property.
This is useful in many ways, as the controller specified will be:
- passed to the
setupController
method. - used as the controller for the template being rendered by the route.
- returned from a call to
controllerFor
for the route.
fullRouteName public
Defined in packages/@ember/routing/route.ts:513
Available since v2.10.0
The name of the route, dot-delimited, including the engine prefix if applicable.
For example, a route found at addon/routes/posts/post.js
within an
engine named admin
will have a fullRouteName
of admin.posts.post
.
isDestroyed public
Inherited from CoreObject packages/@ember/object/core.ts:504
Destroyed object property flag.
if this property is true
the observers and bindings were already
removed by the effect of calling the destroy()
method.
isDestroying public
Inherited from CoreObject packages/@ember/object/core.ts:522
Destruction scheduled flag. The destroy()
method has been called.
The object stays intact until the end of the run loop at which point
the isDestroyed
flag is set.
mergedProperties public
Inherited from CoreObject packages/@ember/object/core.ts:429
Defines the properties that will be merged from the superclass (instead of overridden).
By default, when you extend an Ember class a property defined in
the subclass overrides a property with the same name that is defined
in the superclass. However, there are some cases where it is preferable
to build up a property's value by merging the superclass property value
with the subclass property's value. An example of this in use within Ember
is the queryParams
property of routes.
Here is some sample code showing the difference between a merged property and a normal one:
import EmberObject from '@ember/object';
const Bar = EmberObject.extend({
// Configure which properties are to be merged
mergedProperties: ['mergedProperty'],
someNonMergedProperty: {
nonMerged: 'superclass value of nonMerged'
},
mergedProperty: {
page: { replace: false },
limit: { replace: true }
}
});
const FooBar = Bar.extend({
someNonMergedProperty: {
completelyNonMerged: 'subclass value of nonMerged'
},
mergedProperty: {
limit: { replace: false }
}
});
let fooBar = FooBar.create();
fooBar.get('someNonMergedProperty');
// => { completelyNonMerged: 'subclass value of nonMerged' }
//
// Note the entire object, including the nonMerged property of
// the superclass object, has been replaced
fooBar.get('mergedProperty');
// => {
// page: {replace: false},
// limit: {replace: false}
// }
//
// Note the page remains from the superclass, and the
// `limit` property's value of `false` has been merged from
// the subclass.
This behavior is not available during object create
calls. It is only
available at extend
time.
In Route
the queryParams
property is merged.
This feature is available for you to use throughout the Ember object model, although typical app developers are likely to use it infrequently. Since it changes expectations about behavior of properties, you should properly document its usage in each individual merged property (to not mislead your users to think they can override the property in a subclass).
queryParams public
Defined in packages/@ember/routing/route.ts:359
Available since v1.6.0
Configuration hash for this route's queryParams. The possible
configuration options and their defaults are as follows
(assuming a query param whose controller property is page
):
queryParams = {
page: {
// By default, controller query param properties don't
// cause a full transition when they are changed, but
// rather only cause the URL to update. Setting
// `refreshModel` to true will cause an "in-place"
// transition to occur, whereby the model hooks for
// this route (and any child routes) will re-fire, allowing
// you to reload models (e.g., from the server) using the
// updated query param values.
refreshModel: false,
// By default, changes to controller query param properties
// cause the URL to update via `pushState`, which means an
// item will be added to the browser's history, allowing
// you to use the back button to restore the app to the
// previous state before the query param property was changed.
// Setting `replace` to true will use `replaceState` (or its
// hash location equivalent), which causes no browser history
// item to be added. This options name and default value are
// the same as the `link-to` helper's `replace` option.
replace: false,
// By default, the query param URL key is the same name as
// the controller property name. Use `as` to specify a
// different URL key.
as: 'page'
}
};
routeName public
Defined in packages/@ember/routing/route.ts:499
Available since v1.0.0
The name of the route, dot-delimited.
For example, a route found at app/routes/posts/post.js
will have
a routeName
of posts.post
.
templateName public
Defined in packages/@ember/routing/route.ts:412
Available since v1.4.0
The name of the template to use by default when rendering this route's template.
import Route from '@ember/routing/route';
export default class PostsListRoute extends Route {
templateName = 'posts/list';
}
import PostsListRoute from '../posts/list';
export default class PostsIndexRoute extends PostsListRoute {};
import PostsListRoute from '../posts/list';
export default class PostsArchivedRoute extends PostsListRoute {};
activate public
Defined in packages/@ember/routing/route.ts:800
Available since v1.9.0
This event is triggered when the router enters the route. It is not executed when the model for the route changes.
import { on } from '@ember/object/evented';
import Route from '@ember/routing/route';
export default Route.extend({
collectAnalytics: on('activate', function(){
collectAnalytics();
})
});
deactivate public
Defined in packages/@ember/routing/route.ts:820
Available since v1.9.0
This event is triggered when the router completely exits this route. It is not executed when the model for the route changes.
import { on } from '@ember/object/evented';
import Route from '@ember/routing/route';
export default Route.extend({
trackPageLeaveAnalytics: on('deactivate', function(){
trackPageLeaveAnalytics();
})
});
didTransition public
Defined in packages/@ember/routing/route.ts:127
Available since v1.2.0
The didTransition
action is fired after a transition has
successfully been completed. This occurs after the normal model
hooks (beforeModel
, model
, afterModel
, setupController
)
have resolved. The didTransition
action has no arguments,
however, it can be useful for tracking page views or resetting
state on the controller.
import Route from '@ember/routing/route';
import { action } from '@ember/object';
export default class LoginRoute extends Route {
@action
didTransition() {
// your code there
return true; // Bubble the didTransition event
}
}
error (error, transition) public
Defined in packages/@ember/routing/route.ts:189
Available since v1.0.0
- error
- Error
- transition
- Transition
When attempting to transition into a route, any of the hooks
may return a promise that rejects, at which point an error
action will be fired on the partially-entered routes, allowing
for per-route error handling logic, or shared error handling
logic defined on a parent route.
Here is an example of an error handler that will be invoked for rejected promises from the various hooks on the route, as well as any unhandled errors from child routes:
import { reject } from 'rsvp';
import Route from '@ember/routing/route';
import { action } from '@ember/object';
import { service } from '@ember/service';
export default class AdminRoute extends Route {
@service router;
beforeModel() {
return reject('bad things!');
}
@action
error(error, transition) {
// Assuming we got here due to the error in `beforeModel`,
// we can expect that error === "bad things!",
// but a promise model rejecting would also
// call this hook, as would any errors encountered
// in `afterModel`.
// The `error` hook is also provided the failed
// `transition`, which can be stored and later
// `.retry()`d if desired.
this.router.transitionTo('login');
}
}
error
actions that bubble up all the way to ApplicationRoute
will fire a default error handler that logs the error. You can
specify your own global default error handler by overriding the
error
handler on ApplicationRoute
:
import Route from '@ember/routing/route';
import { action } from '@ember/object';
export default class ApplicationRoute extends Route {
@action
error(error, transition) {
this.controllerFor('banner').displayError(error.message);
}
}
loading (transition, route) public
Defined in packages/@ember/routing/route.ts:154
Available since v1.2.0
- transition
- Transition
- route
- Route
The route that triggered the loading event
The loading
action is fired on the route when a route's model
hook returns a promise that is not already resolved. The current
Transition
object is the first parameter and the route that
triggered the loading event is the second parameter.
import Route from '@ember/routing/route';
import { action } from '@ember/object';
export default class ApplicationRoute extends Route {
@action
loading(transition, route) {
let controller = this.controllerFor('foo');
// The controller may not be instantiated when initially loading
if (controller) {
controller.currentlyLoading = true;
transition.finally(function() {
controller.currentlyLoading = false;
});
}
}
}
willTransition (transition) public
Defined in packages/@ember/routing/route.ts:82
Available since v1.0.0
- transition
- Transition
The willTransition
action is fired at the beginning of any
attempted transition with a Transition
object as the sole
argument. This action can be used for aborting, redirecting,
or decorating the transition from the currently active routes.
A good example is preventing navigation when a form is half-filled out:
import Route from '@ember/routing/route';
import { action } from '@ember/object';
export default class ContactFormRoute extends Route {
@action
willTransition(transition) {
if (this.controller.get('userHasEnteredData')) {
this.controller.displayNavigationConfirm();
transition.abort();
}
}
}
You can also redirect elsewhere by calling
this.router.transitionTo('elsewhere')
from within willTransition
.
Note that willTransition
will not be fired for the
redirecting transitionTo
, since willTransition
doesn't
fire when there is already a transition underway. If you want
subsequent willTransition
actions to fire for the redirecting
transition, you must first explicitly call
transition.abort()
.
To allow the willTransition
event to continue bubbling to the parent
route, use return true;
. When the willTransition
method has a
return value of true
then the parent route's willTransition
method
will be fired, enabling "bubbling" behavior for the event.