You can think of a component as a black box of UI functionality. So far, you've learned how parent components can pass attributes in to a child component, and how that component can use those attributes from both JavaScript and its template.
But what about the opposite direction? How does data flow back out of the component to the parent? In Ember, components use actions to communicate events and changes.
Let's look at a simple example of how a component can use an action to communicate with its parent.
Imagine we're building an application where users can have accounts. We need to build the UI for users to delete their account. Because we don't want users to accidentally delete their accounts, we'll build a button that requires the user to confirm in order to trigger some action.
Once we create this "button with confirmation" component, we want to be able to reuse it all over our application.
Creating the Component
Let's call our component button-with-confirmation
. We can create it by
typing:
ember generate component button-with-confirmation
We'll plan to use the component in a template something like this:
We'll also want to use the component elsewhere, perhaps like this:
Designing the Action
When implementing an action on a component, you need to break it down into two steps:
- In the parent component, decide how you want to react to the action. Here, we want to have the action delete the user's account in one place, and send a message in another place.
- In the component, determine when something has happened, and when to tell the outside world. Here, we want to trigger the outside action (deleting the account or sending the message) after the user clicks the button and then confirms.
Let's take it step by step.
Implementing the Action
In the parent component, let's first define what we want to happen when the user clicks the button and then confirms. In this case, we'll find the user's account and delete it.
In Ember, each component can
have a property called actions
, where you put functions that can be
invoked by the user interacting with the component
itself, or by child components.
Let's look at the parent component's JavaScript file. In this example,
imagine we have a parent component called user-profile
that shows the
user's profile to them.
We'll implement an action on the parent component called
userDidDeleteAccount()
that, when called, gets a hypothetical login
service and calls the service's
deleteUser()
method.
export default Ember.Component.extend({
login: Ember.inject.service(),
actions: {
userDidDeleteAccount() {
this.get('login').deleteUser();
}
}
});
Now we've implemented our action, but we have not told Ember when we want this action to be triggered, which is the next step.
Designing the Child Component
Next, let's implement the logic to confirm that the user wants to take the action from the component:
export default Ember.Component.extend({
actions: {
launchConfirmDialog() {
this.set('confirmShown', true);
},
submitConfirm() {
// trigger action on parent component
this.set('confirmShown', false);
},
cancelConfirm() {
this.set('confirmShown', false);
}
}
});
The component template will have a button and a div that shows the confirmation dialog
based on the value of confirmShown
.
Passing the Action to the Component
Now we need to make it so that the onConfirm()
event in the
button-with-confirmation
component triggers the
userDidDeleteAccount()
action in the user-profile
component.
One important thing to know about actions is that they're functions
you can call, like any other method on your component.
So they can be passed from one component to another like this:
This snippet says "take the userDidDeleteAccount
action from the
parent and make it available on the child component as
onConfirm
."
We can do a similar thing for our send-message
component:
Now, we can use onConfirm
in the child component to invoke the action on the
parent:
export default Ember.Component.extend({
actions: {
launchConfirmDialog() {
this.set('confirmShown', true);
},
submitConfirm() {
//call the onConfirm property to invoke the passed in action
this.get('onConfirm')();
},
cancelConfirm() {
this.set('confirmShown', false);
}
}
});
this.get('onConfirm')
will return the function passed from the parent as the
value of onConfirm
, and the following ()
will invoke the function.
Like normal attributes, actions can be a property on the component; the only difference is that the property is set to a function that knows how to trigger behavior.
That makes it easy to remember how to add an action to a component. It's
like passing an attribute, but you use the action
helper to pass
a function instead.
Actions in components allow you to decouple an event happening from how it's handled, leading to modular, more reusable components.
Handling Action Completion
Often actions perform asynchronous tasks, such as making an ajax request to a server. Since actions are functions that can be passed in by a parent component, they are able to return values when called. The most common scenario is for an action to return a promise so that the component can handle the action's completion.
In our user button-with-confirmation
component we want to leave the confirmation modal open until we know that the
operation has completed successfully.
This is accomplished by expecting a promise to be returned from onConfirm
.
Upon resolution of the promise, we set a property used to indicate the visibility of the confirmation modal.
export default Ember.Component.extend({
actions: {
launchConfirmDialog() {
this.set('confirmShown', true);
},
submitConfirm() {
//call onConfirm with the value of the input field as an argument
const promise = this.get('onConfirm')();
promise.then(() => {
this.set('confirmShown', false);
});
},
cancelConfirm() {
this.set('confirmShown', false);
}
}
});
Passing Arguments
Sometimes the parent component invoking an action has some context needed for the action that the child component
doesn't.
For these cases, actions passed to a component via the action helper may be invoked with arguments.
For example, we'll update the send-message
action to take a message type in addition to the message itself.
Since the button-with-confirmation
component doesn't know or care about what type of message its collecting, we want
to provide a message type from send-message
when we define the action.
In this case, the code in button-with-confirmation
does not change.
It will still invoke onConfirm
with no arguments.
The action helper will add the arguments provided in the template to the call.
Action arguments curry, meaning that you can provide partial arguments to the action helper and provide the rest of the
arguments when you call the function within the component javascript file.
For example, our button-with-confirmation
component will now yield the content
of the confirmation dialog to collect extra information to be sent along with the onConfirm
action:
The send-message
component provides an input as block content to the button-with-confirmation
component, setting
confirmValue
.
Now when the submitConfirm
action is invoked, we call it with the value provided by our yielded input.
export default Ember.Component.extend({
actions: {
launchConfirmDialog() {
this.set("confirmShown", true);
},
submitConfirm() {
//call onConfirm with the value of the input field as an argument
const promise = this.get('onConfirm')(this.get('confirmValue'));
promise.then(() => {
this.set('confirmShown', false);
});
},
cancelConfirm() {
this.set('confirmShown', false);
}
}
});
This action will call our bound sendMessage
function with both the message type we provided earlier, and the template
and the message value provided in the component JavaScript.
export default Ember.Component.extend({
actions: {
sendMessage(messageType, messageText) {
//send message here and return a promise
}
}
});
Invoking Actions Directly on Component Collaborators
Actions can be invoked on objects other than the component directly from the template. For example, in our
send-message
component we might include a service that processes the sendMessage
logic.
export default Ember.Component.extend({
messaging: Ember.inject.service(),
// component implementation
});
We can tell the action to invoke the sendMessage
action directly on the messaging service with the target
attribute.
By supplying the target
attribute, the action helper will look to invoke the sendMessage
action directly on the messaging
service, saving us from writing code on the component that just passes the action along to the service.
export default Ember.Service.extend({
actions: {
sendMessage(messageType, text) {
//handle message send and return a promise
}
}
});
Destructuring Objects Passed as Action Arguments
A component will often not know what information a parent needs to process an action, and will just pass all the
information it has.
For example, our user-profile
component is going to notify its parent, system-preferences-editor
, that a
user's account was deleted, and passes along with it the full user profile object.
export default Ember.Component.extend({
login: Ember.inject.service(),
actions: {
userDidDeleteAccount() {
this.get('login').deleteUser();
this.get('didDelete')(this.get('login.currentUserObj'));
}
}
});
All our system-preferences-editor
component really needs to process a user deletion is an account ID.
For this case, the action helper provides the value
attribute to allow a parent component to dig into the passed
object to pull out only what it needs.
Now when the system-preferences-editor
handles the delete action, it receives only the user's account id
string.
export default Ember.Component.extend({
actions: {
userDeleted(idStr) {
//respond to deletion
}
}
});
Calling Actions Up Multiple Component Layers
When your components go multiple template layers deep, its common to need to handle an action several layers up the tree. Using the action helper, it is possible to make actions defined in parent components available at the bottom layers of your component tree without adding JavaScript code to the components in between.
For example, we want to take account deletion out of the user-profile
component and handle deletion in its parent.
In our template in user-profile.hbs
, we can change our action to call deleteCurrentUser
,
which will be defined on system-preferences-editor
.
Note that deleteCurrentUser
is not in quotes as was the case previously
when the action was local to user-profile
. When you pass an actual function reference (without quotes) to the action
helper, it will call the function from the component's local context.
Alternately, when you pass a string to the action helper, Ember will attempt to call that function from the
component's local actions
object.
Here our system-preferences-editor
template passes its deleteUser
action into the user-profile
component's local deleteCurrentUser
property.
Now when you confirm deletion, the action goes straight to the system-preferences-editor
to handle.
import Ember from 'ember';
export default Ember.Component.extend({
login: Ember.inject.service(),
actions: {
deleteUser(idStr) {
return this.get('login').deleteUserAccount(idStr);
}
}
});