Class Application
publicimport Application from '@ember/application';
An instance of Application
is the starting point for every Ember
application. It instantiates, initializes and coordinates the
objects that make up your app.
Each Ember app has one and only one Application
object. Although
Ember CLI creates this object implicitly, the Application
class
is defined in the app/app.js
. You can define a ready
method on the
Application
class, which will be run by Ember when the application is
initialized.
export default class App extends Application {
ready() {
// your code here
}
}
Because Application
ultimately inherits from Ember.Namespace
, any classes
you create will have useful string representations when calling toString()
.
See the Ember.Namespace
documentation for more information.
While you can think of your Application
as a container that holds the
other classes in your application, there are several other responsibilities
going on under-the-hood that you may want to understand. It is also important
to understand that an Application
is different from an ApplicationInstance
.
Refer to the Guides to understand the difference between these.
Event Delegation
Ember uses a technique called event delegation. This allows the framework
to set up a global, shared event listener instead of requiring each view to
do it manually. For example, instead of each view registering its own
mousedown
listener on its associated element, Ember sets up a mousedown
listener on the body
.
If a mousedown
event occurs, Ember will look at the target of the event and
start walking up the DOM node tree, finding corresponding views and invoking
their mouseDown
method as it goes.
Application
has a number of default events that it listens for, as
well as a mapping from lowercase events to camel-cased view method names. For
example, the keypress
event causes the keyPress
method on the view to be
called, the dblclick
event causes doubleClick
to be called, and so on.
If there is a bubbling browser event that Ember does not listen for by
default, you can specify custom events and their corresponding view method
names by setting the application's customEvents
property:
import Application from '@ember/application';
export default class App extends Application {
customEvents = {
// add support for the paste event
paste: 'paste'
}
}
To prevent Ember from setting up a listener for a default event,
specify the event name with a null
value in the customEvents
property:
import Application from '@ember/application';
export default class App extends Application {
customEvents = {
// prevent listeners for mouseenter/mouseleave events
mouseenter: null,
mouseleave: null
}
}
By default, the application sets up these event listeners on the document body. However, in cases where you are embedding an Ember application inside an existing page, you may want it to set up the listeners on an element inside the body.
For example, if only events inside a DOM element with the ID of ember-app
should be delegated, set your application's rootElement
property:
import Application from '@ember/application';
export default class App extends Application {
rootElement = '#ember-app'
}
The rootElement
can be either a DOM element or a CSS selector
string. Note that views appended to the DOM outside the root element will
not receive events. If you specify a custom root element, make sure you only
append views inside it!
To learn more about the events Ember components use, see
Initializers
To add behavior to the Application's boot process, you can define initializers in
the app/initializers
directory, or with ember generate initializer
using Ember CLI.
These files should export a named initialize
function which will receive the created application
object as its first argument.
export function initialize(application) {
// application.inject('route', 'foo', 'service:foo');
}
Application initializers can be used for a variety of reasons including:
- setting up external libraries
- injecting dependencies
- setting up event listeners in embedded apps
- deferring the boot process using the
deferReadiness
andadvanceReadiness
APIs.
Routing
In addition to creating your application's router, Application
is
also responsible for telling the router when to start routing. Transitions
between routes can be logged with the LOG_TRANSITIONS
flag, and more
detailed intra-transition logging can be logged with
the LOG_TRANSITIONS_INTERNAL
flag:
import Application from '@ember/application';
let App = Application.create({
LOG_TRANSITIONS: true, // basic logging of successful transitions
LOG_TRANSITIONS_INTERNAL: true // detailed logging of all routing steps
});
By default, the router will begin trying to translate the current URL into
application state once the browser emits the DOMContentReady
event. If you
need to defer routing, you can call the application's deferReadiness()
method. Once routing can begin, call the advanceReadiness()
method.
If there is any setup required before routing begins, you can implement a
ready()
method on your app that will be invoked immediately before routing
begins.
Methods
- advanceReadiness
- boot
- buildInstance
- deferReadiness
- initializer
- instanceInitializer
- register
- reset
- visit