Often, you may have a computed property that relies on all of the items in an array to determine its value. For example, you may want to count all of the todo items in a controller to determine how many of them are completed.
Here's what that computed property might look like:
export default Ember.Controller.extend({
  todos: [
    Ember.Object.create({ isDone: true }),
    Ember.Object.create({ isDone: false }),
    Ember.Object.create({ isDone: true })
  ],
  remaining: function() {
    var todos = this.get('todos');
    return todos.filterBy('isDone', false).get('length');
  }.property('todos.@each.isDone')
});Note here that the dependent key (todos.@each.isDone) contains the special
key @each. This instructs Ember.js to update bindings and fire observers for
this computed property when one of the following four events occurs:
- The isDoneproperty of any of the objects in thetodosarray changes.
- An item is added to the todosarray.
- An item is removed from the todosarray.
- The todosproperty of the controller is changed to a different array.
In the example above, the remaining count is 1:
import TodosController from 'app/controllers/todos';
todosController = TodosController.create();
todosController.get('remaining');
// 1If we change the todo's isDone property, the remaining property is updated
automatically:
var todos = todosController.get('todos');
var todo = todos.objectAt(1);
todo.set('isDone', true);
todosController.get('remaining');
// 0
todo = Ember.Object.create({ isDone: false });
todos.pushObject(todo);
todosController.get('remaining');
// 1Note that @each only works one level deep. You cannot use nested forms like
todos.@each.owner.name or todos.@each.owner.@each.name.