ember-fn-helper-polyfill
v1.0.2
Published
A polyfill for the fn helper provided by Ember in 3.11+
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ember-fn-helper-polyfill
This addon provides a polyfill for the {{fn}}
helper as described in
emberjs/rfcs#470.
Compatibility
- Completely inert when running
ember-source
3.11 or higher - Tested against
ember-source
v2.12, v2.16, v2.18, v3.4, v3.8, and v3.10 in CI - Ember CLI v3.4 or above
- Node.js v8 or above
Installation
ember install ember-fn-helper-polyfill
Usage
The fn
helper allows you to ensure a function that you are passing off
to another component, helper, or modifier has access to arguments that are
available in the template.
For example, if you have an each
helper looping over a number of items, you
may need to pass a function that expects to receive the item as an argument
to a component invoked within the loop. Here's how you could use the fn
helper to pass both the function and its arguments together:
{{! app/templates/components/items-listing.hbs }}
{{#each @items as |item|}}
<DisplayItem @item=item @select={{fn this.handleSelected item}} />
{{/each}}
// app/components/items-list.js
import Component from '@glimmer/component';
import { action } from '@ember/object';
export default class ItemsList extends Component {
@action
handleSelected(item) {
// ...snip...
}
}
In this case the display-item
component will receive a normal function
that it can invoke. When it invokes the function, the handleSelected
function will receive the item
and any arguments passed, thanks to the
fn
helper.
Let's take look at what that means in a couple circumstances:
- When invoked as
this.args.select()
thehandleSelected
function will receive theitem
from the loop as its first and only argument. - When invoked as
this.args.select('foo')
thehandleSelected
function will receive theitem
from the loop as its first argument and the string'foo'
as its second argument.
In the example above, we used @action
to ensure that handleSelected
is
properly bound to the items-list
, but let's explore what happens if we
left out @action
:
// app/components/items-list.js
import Component from '@glimmer/component';
export default class ItemsList extends Component {
handleSelected(item) {
// ...snip...
}
}
In this example, when handleSelected
is invoked inside the display-item
component, it will not have access to the component instance. In other
words, it will have no this
context, so please make sure your functions
are bound (via @action
or other means) before passing into fn
!
See also partial application.
Contributing
See the Contributing guide for details.
License
This project is licensed under the MIT License.