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notes.txt
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maintainability3:
- tdd style
- tdd justification:
"Test driven development is not valuable because it catches errors,
but because it changes the way you think about interfaces between
modules. Writing tests <i>before you write code</i> influences how you
think about the public interface of your modules and their coupling,
it provides a safety net for performing refactoring and it documents
the expected behavior of the system."
"Tests are a contract: this is what this particular module needs to
provide externally."
- use anything but Jasmine; Mixu likes Mocha (me too!)
- prefers the exports['test description'] style for writing tests.
I've been using the BDD style, describe()/it(). His argument in
favor of exports style is that it's the 'simplest thing that works'.
- nice, lucid description of the concept of "dependency injection".
Basically just the ability to swap in/out a module's dependency
explicitly... for example, by taking a db storage backend and swapping
it for a mock storage backend.
- two ways: pass as a param into the constructor, or swap out a
module for a different one that obeys the same contract.
- example of constructor-param style:
function Channel(options) {
this.backend = options.backend || require('persistence');
};
- note that this is annoying because everywhere in your module you now
reference this.backend.send instead of this.send. you also now
always pass in this param even though you only need it for testing.
and you need to expose that param all the way up your stack for as long
as you want to be able to separate it out...
- Module substitution: just add a function like _setBackend(); He
tried other approaches but the added complexity didn't pay off for
enough gains. Note: "Since module requires are cached, that private
closure and variable can be set for every call to the module, even
when the module is required from multiple different files."
eg:
<pre class="prettyprint">
var Persistence = require('persistence');
function Channel() { };
Channel.prototype.publish = function(message) {
Persistence.send(message);
};
Channel._setBackend = function(backend) {
Persistence = backend;
};
module.exports = Channel;
</pre>
- Add EventEmitter.when(event, cb) as an extension to the EE API,
similar to EE.once(), except that the callback is only removed on
success. Clever.
EventEmitter.when = function(event, callback) {
var self = this;
function check() {
if(callback.apply(this, arguments)) {
self.removeListener(event, check);
}
}
check.listener = callback;
self.on(event, check);
return this;
};
detail1: The View Layer
- The view layer is the most complex part of a modern SPA. After all
that's the whole point of writing an SPA in the first place,
better/richer interactions.
- Low vs High interactivity: Github vs Gmail. Bot SPAs but with
different approaches needed.
- Close to server vs Close to client: closer to client =
richer/faster/more dynamic user experience. close to server = faster
DB/storage access.
- Approaches:
- data in markup+html manipulation. have most of the data already
present in the DOM and use javascript to spruce it up (eg, take an
existing ul/li list and add some js to allow for filtering and
sorting).
- specific html/css markup - make small, targeted parts of the app
dynamic in a declarative fashion.
- PJAX - user action triggers code that replace part/parts of the
existing page with new content fetched from the server, then use the
HTML5 History API / PushState to give the appearance of a page
change.
- Widgets - generated page is just a loader for JS. The page
instantiates the widgets, then they go off and fetch more data via a
JSON API or something. Mostly you work w/ widgets, not HTML or CSS.
- Markup-driven vs Model-backed views
- model-backed: you start with the model first. instantiate it,
then pass it to the view. Views then attach themselves into the
DOM and render their content by running the model data through a
template.
- markup-driven: still have views/models, but the relationship is
inverted. views are wirtten using mostly markup (declarative
style). So the view accesses model data directly as needed.
- markup-driven vs model-backed are two very different styles.
- if you go markup-style, you need an intricate template system
capable of generating the metadata needed for the functionality.
Need to translate the templating language into view objects
- if you go model (ie, code)-style, it's more verbose to write
but simpler overall. Framework code size can be vastly different
(he implies it's much smaller for model style)
- where to store view behaviour: view object or "controller" object?
Traditional MVC says "skinny controller, fat model". Take it a
step further and nuke controller entirely, replace with just view
code + initialization code (to bind data/setup behaviour).
- "But writing code in your view is bad!" -- sure, if the "view" is
just a giant string of HTML. But in an SPA, that's not the case
at all... You have the luxury of thinking at a higher level of
abstraction. In a SPA the init step for a view is just the first
step in interacting with a user. A nicely self-contained
component with both presentation + behaviour (ie, well
modularized) is easier to use and test.
- Markup-driven style: ideally, there would be no view objects at
all; everything would be handled by the markup and data.
- Instead of overloading 'controller' to sometimes mean "code
pertaining to a specific view" as well as "code that coordinates
your overall application state", think of
- view behaviour
- initialization code
- Observables vs EventEmitter - not much difference. Observable =
global via name, EventEmitter = attach directly to object.
Markup-driven style tends to lead to the use of observables. He
dislikes observables b/c of the 'reference everything by global
string' issue. Also observables tend to lead to larger models,
where you slam stuff in to the general model even though it's only
used in a particular view...
- Update granularity: view vs element vs string. Subtle but important
part of the view layer.
- view-granular: view is an element reference and you replace the
whole thing on update.
- element-granular: sub-addressable components exist in the DOM
and can be swapped out, need to be wrapped in DOM elements. if
you're adding these on in the framework, can mess with CSS that
might be in place... (eg, disrupting the class hierarchy)
- string-granular: most complex but most flexible. use script
tags or comment tags to delimit updateable content (the latter b/c
the Range API is broken on IE?)
- Conclusion: "There is a tradeoff between DRY and simplicity. When
your templating system is less sophisticated, you tend to need to
write more code, but that code will be simpler to troubleshoot.
Basically, you can expect to understand the code you wrote, but
fewer people are well versed in what might go wrong in your
framework code."
- details2: data sources, models, collections
- data source: make a model out of stored data. fetch by ID or
search by some criteria. Can also read from cache as appropriate to
improve performance
- model: translate between your app and guts/details of interacting
with the data source. Emits events when data changes, otherwise
mostly just stores data. May also have associations and
validations.
- collection: a list of models. emits events when items
added/removed, has a defined item ordering.
- Implement as either
- Model collection that emits events
- Observable array of items
- cache: allow for faster retrieval, save to database storage,
prevent duplicates from being instantiated (?)
- collections1: implementing a data source
- mixu builds a RESTful, chainable data source API with the
following features (written as test cases):
- load single item by ID
- load multiple items by ID
- load items by search query
- add search conditions using and()
- chainable API: not much code needed to do this! (pun)
- takes two params: URL and Model. URL is where to get the data,
Model is what to wrap the returned JSON with, if desired.
Otherwise they'll be plain javascript objects.
- if arg == number, assume model ID. if arg == array, assume it's a
list of IDs. if arg == object, assume it's a key:value search
param.
- example of this API in action
Client
.get('http://www.google.com/')
.data({q: 'hello world'})
.end(function(err, data) {
console.log(data);
});
- collections2: implementing a model
- data, events, persistence
- his own is quite small and portable, though suggests the Backbone
model is more "production-ready"
- collections3: collections for real
- features:
- store items, emit events - .add()
- clear it out - .reset()
- remove items - .remove(model)
- retrieve by index/retrieve all - return this._items[index] /
this._items
- iteration: forEach, filter, map, every, some
- sorting: just need a comparator function, then pass that into
Array.sort
- example usage:
var items = new Collection();
items.on('add', function(item) {
console.log('Added', item);
});
setInterval(function() {
items.add(Math.floor(Math.random() * 100));
console.log(items.all());
}, 1000);
- creating a collection
- listen on .add/.remove to maintain the direct-to-ID mapping as
well for .get
- listen for change events in the models, so that we know when
we've changed too
- unbind when a model is removed, or the entire collection gets reset
- collections4: data cache
- Make Model.save/destroy calls now reference the datastore instead of a
direct operation.
- model lifecycle:
- instantiation: new Model() and DataSource.find()
- persistence: create, update, delete -- remembering the cache as appropriate
- data changes: when a model changes, its cache entry should be
updated.
- reference counting: to keep track of how many things you have
- implementing the store/cache: .add .has .save. delete .reference
- (what is .reference?)
- collections5: associations: hasOne, hasMany
- Basically sugar to make coding more pleasant
- Dealing w/ callbacks: series, parallel, parallel+capped
concurrency
- knocks against Promises style: "APIs that <i>appear</i> not to
incur the cost of IO but actually do are the leakiest of
abstractions"
- acknowledges that he doesn't want mega-rightward drift via
callback nesting either, though
- his approach? Declare the dependencies and then a callback to run
once all the deps are resolved (eg, loaded from DB, etc).
- views1: templating systems
- types of views: ones that emit
- simple functions
- functions + metadata
- full-blown objects with lifecycles
- template = the thing that turns data into HTML
- use a templating lib to get the nicest possible template-writing
syntax, and the performance of using native JS otherwise
- this isn't performance-critical code, usually...
- element/string-granular rendering requires a templating system w/
full objects or functions+metadata...
- views2: behavior: binding DOM events to HTML
- need to delay event registration and ensure that our handlers are
attached, but only once
- DOM-based event bindings: basically good ol' jquery style
$(selector).on('event', fn(){ dostuff(); });
- "There is reason why many frameworks make a view represent a
single element; it makes binding events a lot easier if you can
instantiate the element early on. The initial render workflow
looks something like this:"
- views3: consuming events from the model layer
- re-rendering views in response to data changes
- communication between views
- these are both coordination problems. We want to bridge the gap
between the DOM events and event handlers scattered across
multiple views
- boils down to observables vs event emitters, which as mentioned
are basically just the same thing anyway
- different implications for observables vs event emitters:
observables are basically a form of global state, boo. at least
with a shared message bus (ie, global event emitter), it's just
that one piece that's actually global to all modules...