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Defining Models


A model is a class that defines the properties and behavior of the data that you present to the user. Anything that the user expects to see if they leave your app and come back later (or if they refresh the page) should be represented by a model.

When you want a new model for your application you need to create a new file under the models folder and extend from DS.Model. This is more conveniently done by using one of Ember CLI's generator commands. For instance, let's create a person model:

ember generate model person

This will generate the following file:

export default DS.Model.extend({
});

After you have defined a model class, you can start finding and working with records of that type.

Defining Attributes

The person model we generated earlier didn't have any attributes. Let's add first and last name, as well as the birthday, using DS.attr:

export default DS.Model.extend({
  firstName: DS.attr(),
  lastName: DS.attr(),
  birthday: DS.attr()
});

Attributes are used when turning the JSON payload returned from your server into a record, and when serializing a record to save back to the server after it has been modified.

You can use attributes just like any other property, including as part of a computed property. Frequently, you will want to define computed properties that combine or transform primitive attributes.

export default DS.Model.extend({
  firstName: DS.attr(),
  lastName: DS.attr(),

  fullName: Ember.computed('firstName', 'lastName', function() {
    return `${this.get('firstName')} ${this.get('lastName')}`;
  })
});

For more about adding computed properties to your classes, see Computed Properties.

Transforms

You may find the type of an attribute returned by the server does not match the type you would like to use in your JavaScript code. Ember Data allows you to define simple serialization and deserialization methods for attribute types called transforms. You can specify that you would like a transform to run for an attribute by providing the transform name as the first argument to the DS.attr method.

For example if you would like to transform an ISO 8601 string to a JavaScript date object you would define your attribute like this:

export default DS.Model.extend({
  birthday: DS.attr('date')
});

Ember Data supports attribute types of string, number, boolean, and date. Which coerce the value to the JavaScript type that matches its name.

Transforms are not required. If you do not specify a transform name Ember Data will do no additional processing of the value.

Options

DS.attr can also take a hash of options as a second parameter. At the moment the only option available is defaultValue, which can use a string or a function to set the default value of the attribute if one is not supplied.

In the following example we define that verified has a default value of false and createdAt defaults to the current date at the time of the model's creation:

export default DS.Model.extend({
  username: DS.attr('string'),
  email: DS.attr('string'),
  verified: DS.attr('boolean', { defaultValue: false }),
  createdAt: DS.attr('string', {
    defaultValue() { return new Date(); }
  })
});

Defining Relationships

Ember Data includes several built-in relationship types to help you define how your models relate to each other.

One-to-One

To declare a one-to-one relationship between two models, use DS.belongsTo:

export default DS.Model.extend({
  profile: DS.belongsTo('profile')
});
export default DS.Model.extend({
  user: DS.belongsTo('user')
});

One-to-Many

To declare a one-to-many relationship between two models, use DS.belongsTo in combination with DS.hasMany, like this:

export default DS.Model.extend({
  comments: DS.hasMany('comment')
});
export default DS.Model.extend({
  post: DS.belongsTo('post')
});

Many-to-Many

To declare a many-to-many relationship between two models, use DS.hasMany:

export default DS.Model.extend({
  tags: DS.hasMany('tag')
});
export default DS.Model.extend({
  posts: DS.hasMany('post')
});

Explicit Inverses

Ember Data will do its best to discover which relationships map to one another. In the one-to-many code above, for example, Ember Data can figure out that changing the comments relationship should update the post relationship on the inverse because post is the only relationship to that model.

However, sometimes you may have multiple belongsTo/hasManys for the same type. You can specify which property on the related model is the inverse using DS.belongsTo or DS.hasMany's inverse option. Relationships without an inverse can be indicated as such by including { inverse: null }.

export default DS.Model.extend({
  onePost: DS.belongsTo('post', { inverse: null }),
  twoPost: DS.belongsTo('post'),
  redPost: DS.belongsTo('post'),
  bluePost: DS.belongsTo('post')
});
export default DS.Model.extend({
  comments: DS.hasMany('comment', {
    inverse: 'redPost'
  })
});

Reflexive Relations

When you want to define a reflexive relation (a model that has a relationship to itself), you must explicitly define the inverse relationship. If there is no inverse relationship then you can set the inverse to null.

Here's an example of a one-to-many reflexive relationship:

export default DS.Model.extend({
  children: DS.hasMany('folder', { inverse: 'parent' }),
  parent: DS.belongsTo('folder', { inverse: 'children' })
});

Here's an example of a one-to-one reflexive relationship:

export default DS.Model.extend({
  name: DS.attr('string'),
  bestFriend: DS.belongsTo('user', { inverse: 'bestFriend' }),
});

You can also define a reflexive relationship that doesn't have an inverse:

export default DS.Model.extend({
  parent: DS.belongsTo('folder', { inverse: null })
});

Readonly Nested Data

Some models may have properties that are deeply nested objects of readonly data. The naive solution would be to define models for each nested object and use hasMany and belongsTo to recreate the nested relationship. However, since readonly data will never need to be updated and saved this often results in the creation of a great deal of code for very little benefit. An alternate approch is to define these relationships using an attribute with no transform (DS.attr()). This makes it easy to access readonly values in computed properties and templates without the overhead of defining extraneous models.