If you need to display all of the keys or values of a
JavaScript object in your template, you can use the
{{#each-in}}
helper:
export default Ember.Component.extend({
willRender() {
// Set the "categories" property to a JavaScript object
// with the category name as the key and the value a list
// of products.
this.set('categories', {
'Bourbons': ['Bulleit', 'Four Roses', 'Woodford Reserve'],
'Ryes': ['WhistlePig', 'High West']
});
}
});
The template inside of the {{#each-in}}
block is repeated once for
each key in the passed object. The first block parameter (category
in
the above example) is the key for this iteration, while the second block
parameter (products
) is the actual value of that key.
The above example will print a list like this:
<ul>
<li>Bourbons
<ol>
<li>Bulleit</li>
<li>Four Roses</li>
<li>Woodford Reserve</li>
</ol>
</li>
<li>Ryes
<ol>
<li>WhistlePig</li>
<li>High West</li>
</ol>
</li>
</ul>
Re-rendering
The {{#each-in}}
helper does not observe property changes to the object passed into it. In
the above example, if you were to add a key to the component's categories
property after the component had rendered, the template would not
automatically update.
export default Ember.Component.extend({
willRender() {
this.set('categories', {
'Bourbons': ['Bulleit', 'Four Roses', 'Woodford Reserve'],
'Ryes': ['WhistlePig', 'High West']
});
},
actions: {
addCategory(category) {
// This won't work!
let categories = this.get('categories');
categories[category] = [];
}
}
});
In order to cause a component to re-render after you have added,
removed or changed a property from an object, you need to either
set()
the
property on the component again, or manually trigger a re-render of the
component via rerender()
:
export default Ember.Component.extend({
willRender() {
this.set('categories', {
'Bourbons': ['Bulleit', 'Four Roses', 'Woodford Reserve'],
'Ryes': ['WhistlePig', 'High West']
});
},
actions: {
addCategory(category) {
let categories = this.get('categories');
categories[category] = [];
// A manual re-render causes the DOM to be updated
this.rerender();
}
}
});
Ordering
An object's keys will be listed in the same order as the array returned
from calling Object.keys
on that object. If you want a different sort
order, you should use Object.keys
to get an array, sort that array
with the built-in JavaScript tools, and use the
{{#each}}
helper instead.
Empty Lists
The {{#each-in}}
helper can have a matching {{else}}
. The contents of this block will render
if the object is empty, null, or undefined:
Hello, ! You are years old.
Sorry, nobody is here.