To get started with Ember.js, there are a few core concepts you should understand.
Ember.js is designed to help developers build ambitiously large web applications that are competitive with native apps. Doing so requires both new tools and a new vocabulary of concepts. We've spent a lot of time borrowing ideas pioneered by native application frameworks like Cocoa and Smalltalk.
However, it's important to remember what makes the web special. Many people think that something is a web application because it uses technologies like HTML, CSS and JavaScript. In reality, these are just implementation details.
Instead, the web derives its power from the ability to bookmark and share URLs. URLs are the key feature that give web applications superior shareability and collaboration. Today, most JavaScript frameworks treat the URL as an afterthought, instead of the primary reason for the web's success.
Ember.js, therefore, marries the tools and concepts of native GUI frameworks with support for the feature that makes the web so powerful: the URL.
Concepts
Templates
A template, written in the Handlebars templating language, describes the user interface of your application. Each template is backed by a model, and the template automatically updates itself if the model changes.
In addition to plain HTML, templates can contain:
- Expressions, like
{{firstName}}
, which take information from the template's model and put it into HTML. - Outlets, which are placeholders for other templates. As users
move around your app, different templates can be plugged into the
outlet by the router. You can put outlets into your template using the
{{outlet}}
helper. - Components, custom HTML elements that you can use to clean up repetitive templates or create reusable controls.
Router
The router translates a URL into a series of nested templates, each backed by a model. As the templates or models being shown to the user change, Ember automatically keeps the URL in the browser's address bar up-to-date.
This means that, at any point, users are able to share the URL of your app. When someone clicks the link, they reliably see the same content as the original user.
Components
A component is a custom HTML tag whose behavior you implement using JavaScript and whose appearance you describe using Handlebars templates. They allow you to create reusable controls that can simplify your application's templates.
Models
A model is an object that stores persistent state. Templates are responsible for displaying the model to the user by turning it into HTML. In many applications, models are loaded via an HTTP JSON API, although Ember is agnostic to the backend that you choose.
Route
A route is an object that tells the template which model it should display.
These are the core concepts you'll need to understand as you develop your Ember.js app. They are designed to scale up in complexity, so that adding new functionality doesn't force you to go back and refactor major parts of your app.
Now that you understand the roles of these objects, you're equipped to dive deep into Ember.js and learn the details of how each of these individual pieces work.