Class DS
All Ember Data methods and functions are defined inside of this namespace.
attr (type, options) Attribute
Defined in packages/ember-data/lib/system/model/attributes.js:253
- type
- String
the attribute type
- options
- Object
a hash of options
- returns
- Attribute
DS.attr
defines an attribute on a DS.Model.
By default, attributes are passed through as-is, however you can specify an
optional type to have the value automatically transformed.
Ember Data ships with four basic transform types: string
, number
,
boolean
and date
. You can define your own transforms by subclassing
DS.Transform.
Note that you cannot use attr
to define an attribute of id
.
DS.attr
takes an optional hash as a second parameter, currently
supported options are:
defaultValue
: Pass a string or a function to be called to set the attribute to a default value if none is supplied.
Example
import DS from 'ember-data';
export default DS.Model.extend({
username: DS.attr('string'),
email: DS.attr('string'),
verified: DS.attr('boolean', { defaultValue: false })
});
Default value can also be a function. This is useful it you want to return a new object for each attribute.
import DS from 'ember-data';
export default DS.Model.extend({
username: attr('string'),
email: attr('string'),
settings: attr({defaultValue: function() {
return {};
}})
});
belongsTo (modelName, options) Ember.computed
Defined in packages/ember-data/lib/system/relationships/belongs-to.js:5
- modelName
- String
(optional) type of the relationship
- options
- Object
(optional) a hash of options
- returns
- Ember.computed
relationship
DS.belongsTo
is used to define One-To-One and One-To-Many
relationships on a DS.Model.
DS.belongsTo
takes an optional hash as a second parameter, currently
supported options are:
async
: A boolean value used to explicitly declare this to be an async relationship.inverse
: A string used to identify the inverse property on a related model in a One-To-Many relationship. See Explicit Inverses
One-To-One
To declare a one-to-one relationship between two models, use
DS.belongsTo
:
import DS from 'ember-data';
export default DS.Model.extend({
profile: DS.belongsTo('profile')
});
import DS from 'ember-data';
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:
import DS from 'ember-data';
export default DS.Model.extend({
comments: DS.hasMany('comment')
});
import DS from 'ember-data';
export default DS.Model.extend({
post: DS.belongsTo('post')
});
You can avoid passing a string as the first parameter. In that case Ember Data will infer the type from the key name.
import DS from 'ember-data';
export default DS.Model.extend({
post: DS.belongsTo()
});
will lookup for a Post type.
hasMany (type, options) Ember.computed
Defined in packages/ember-data/lib/system/relationships/has-many.js:9
- type
- String
(optional) type of the relationship
- options
- Object
(optional) a hash of options
- returns
- Ember.computed
relationship
DS.hasMany
is used to define One-To-Many and Many-To-Many
relationships on a DS.Model.
DS.hasMany
takes an optional hash as a second parameter, currently
supported options are:
async
: A boolean value used to explicitly declare this to be an async relationship.inverse
: A string used to identify the inverse property on a related model.
One-To-Many
To declare a one-to-many relationship between two models, use
DS.belongsTo
in combination with DS.hasMany
, like this:
import DS from 'ember-data';
export default DS.Model.extend({
comments: DS.hasMany('comment')
});
import DS from 'ember-data';
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
:
import DS from 'ember-data';
export default DS.Model.extend({
tags: DS.hasMany('tag')
});
import DS from 'ember-data';
export default DS.Model.extend({
posts: DS.hasMany('post')
});
You can avoid passing a string as the first parameter. In that case Ember Data will infer the type from the singularized key name.
import DS from 'ember-data';
export default DS.Model.extend({
tags: DS.hasMany()
});
will lookup for a Tag type.
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.hasMany
's inverse
option:
import DS from 'ember-data';
export default DS.Model.extend({
onePost: DS.belongsTo('post'),
twoPost: DS.belongsTo('post'),
redPost: DS.belongsTo('post'),
bluePost: DS.belongsTo('post')
});
import DS from 'ember-data';
export default DS.Model.extend({
comments: DS.hasMany('comment', {
inverse: 'redPost'
})
});
You can also specify an inverse on a belongsTo
, which works how
you'd expect.
normalizeModelName (modelName) String public
Defined in packages/ember-data/lib/system/normalize-model-name.js:1
- modelName
- String
- returns
- String
if the adapter can generate one, an ID
All modelNames are dasherized internally. Changing this function may require changes to other normalization hooks (such as typeForRoot).