Rivets.js
Rivets.js is a declarative data binding facility that plays well with existing frameworks such as Backbone.js, Spine.js and Stapes.js. It aims to be lightweight (1.4KB minified and gzipped), extensible, and configurable to work with any event-driven model.
Describe your UI in plain HTML using data attributes:
<div id='auction'>
<h1 data-text='auction.title'></h1>
<img data-src='auction.image_url'>
<span data-text='auction.timeRemaining | time'></span>
<div class='alert-box' data-show='auction.endingSoon'>
<p>Hurry up! This auction is ending soon.</p>
</div>
<dl>
<dt>Highest Bid:</dt>
<dd data-text='auction.bid | currency'></dd>
<dt>Bidder:</dt>
<dd data-text='auction.bidder'></dd>
</dl>
<dl>
<dt>Bids Left:</dt>
<dd data-text='user.bidCount'></dd>
</dl>
</div>
Then tell Rivets.js what model(s) to bind to it:
rivets.bind($('#auction'), {auction: auction, user: currentUser});
Configure
Use rivets.configure
to configure Rivets.js for your app (or set them manually on rivets.config
). There are a few handy configuration options, such as setting the data attribute prefix and adding formatters that you can pipe binding values to, but setting the adapter is the only required configuration since Rivets.js needs to know how to observe your models for changes as they happen.
Adapter
Rivets.js is model interface-agnostic, meaning it can work with any event-driven model by way of defining an adapter. An adapter is just an object that responds to subscribe
, unsubscribe
, read
and publish
. Here is a sample configuration with an adapter for using Rivets.js with Backbone.js.
rivets.configure({
adapter: {
subscribe: function(obj, keypath, callback) {
callback.wrapped = function(m, v) { callback(v) };
obj.on('change:' + keypath, callback.wrapped);
},
unsubscribe: function(obj, keypath, callback) {
obj.off('change:' + keypath, callback.wrapped);
},
read: function(obj, keypath) {
return obj.get(keypath);
},
publish: function(obj, keypath, value) {
obj.set(keypath, value);
}
}
});
Formatters
Formatters are simple one-way functions that mutate the incoming value of a binding. You can use them to format dates, numbers, currencies, etc. and because they work in a similar fashion to the Unix pipeline, the output of each feeds directly as input to the next one, so you can stack as many of them together as you like.
rivets.configure({
formatters: {
money: function(value){
return accounting.formatMoney(value);
},
date: function(value){
return moment(value).format('MMM DD, YYYY');
}
}
});
Prefix and data preloading
To prevent data attribute collision, you can set the prefix
option to something like 'rv' or 'bind' so that data attributes are prefixed like data-rv-text
.
Set the preloadData
option to true
or false
depending on if you want the binding routines to run immediately after the initial binding or not — if set to false, the binding routines will only run when the attribute value is updated.
Extend
Rivets.js comes bundled with a few commonly used bindings, but users are encouraged to add their own that are specific to the needs of their application. Rivets.js is easily extended by adding your own binding routines. Binding routines are the functions that run when an observed attribute changes. Their sole concern is to describe what happens to the element when a new value comes in. All binding routines are publicly available on the rivets.routines
object.
Let's say we wanted a data-color
binding that sets the element's colour, here's what the routine function for that binding might look like:
rivets.routines.color = function(el, value) {
el.style.color = value;
};
With that routine defined, the following binding will update the element's color when model.color
changes:
<span data-color="model.color">COLOR</span>
Available bindings out-of-the-box
- data-text
- data-html
- data-value
- data-show
- data-hide
- data-enabled
- data-disabled
- data-checked
- data-unchecked
- data-[attribute]
- data-on-[event]
Usage Notes
Rivets.View and Rivets.Binding
The rivets.bind
function returns a bound Rivets.View
instance that you should hold on to for later. You may want to unbind it's listeners with view.unbind()
and/or rebuild it's bindings with view.build()
. You can also access the individual Rivets.Binding
instances inside the view through view.bindings
— this is useful for debugging purposes or if you want to unbind or manually set the value for certain bindings.
Iteration Binding
Even though a binding routine for each-item
will likely be included in Rivets.js, you can use the data-html
binding along with a set of formatters in the interim to do sorting and iterative rendering of collections (amongst other cool things).
<ul data-html="model.tags | sort | tagList"></ul>
Building and Testing
Make sure to run npm install
so that you have all the development dependencies. To have the test suite run as part of the build process, you'll also need to have PhantomJS installed.
Building
Rivets.js uses grunt as the build tool. Run grunt build
from within the project root to compile + minify the source into /lib, or just run grunt
to have it watch the source file for changes — it will compile + minify into /lib and run the test suite whenever the source file is saved.
Testing
Rivets.js uses Jasmine as the testing framework. You can run the test suite with grunt spec
or by opening /spec/index.html.