Ember.MutableArray Class packages/ember-runtime/lib/mixins/mutable_array.js:28
PUBLIC
Uses: Ember.Array
Uses: Ember.MutableEnumerable
Defined in: packages/ember-runtime/lib/mixins/mutable_array.js:28
Module: ember-runtime
This mixin defines the API for modifying array-like objects. These methods can be applied only to a collection that keeps its items in an ordered set. It builds upon the Array mixin and adds methods to modify the array. One concrete implementations of this class include ArrayProxy.
It is important to use the methods in this class to modify arrays so that changes are observable. This allows the binding system in Ember to function correctly.
Note that an Array can change even if it does not implement this mixin. For example, one might implement a SparseArray that cannot be directly modified, but if its underlying enumerable changes, it will change also.
Methods
- addArrayObserver
- addEnumerableObserver
- addObject
- addObjects
- any
- arrayContentDidChange
- arrayContentWillChange
- clear
- compact
- contains
- enumerableContentDidChange
- enumerableContentWillChange
- every
- filter
- filterBy
- find
- findBy
- forEach
- getEach
- indexOf
- insertAt
- invoke
- isAny
- isEvery
- lastIndexOf
- map
- mapBy
- nextObject
- objectAt
- objectsAt
- popObject
- pushObject
- pushObjects
- reduce
- reject
- rejectBy
- removeArrayObserver
- removeAt
- removeEnumerableObserver
- removeObject
- removeObjects
- replace
- reverseObjects
- setEach
- setObjects
- shiftObject
- slice
- sortBy
- toArray
- uniq
- unshiftObject
- unshiftObjects
- without
Properties
addArrayObserver
(target, opts)
Ember.Array
public
Adds an array observer to the receiving array. The array observer object normally must implement two methods:
arrayWillChange(observedObj, start, removeCount, addCount)
- This method will be called just before the array is modified.arrayDidChange(observedObj, start, removeCount, addCount)
- This method will be called just after the array is modified.
Both callbacks will be passed the observed object, starting index of the change as well as a count of the items to be removed and added. You can use these callbacks to optionally inspect the array during the change, clear caches, or do any other bookkeeping necessary.
In addition to passing a target, you can also include an options hash which you can use to override the method names that will be invoked on the target.
Parameters:
- target Object
- The observer object.
- opts Object
- Optional hash of configuration options including `willChange` and `didChange` option.
Returns:
- Ember.Array
- receiver
addEnumerableObserver
(target, opts)
private
Registers an enumerable observer. Must implement Ember.EnumerableObserver
mixin.
Parameters:
- target Object
- opts [Object]
Returns:
- this
addObject
(obj)
Ember.Array
public
Push the object onto the end of the array if it is not already present in the array.
1 2 3 4 |
var cities = ['Chicago', 'Berlin']; cities.addObject('Lima'); // ['Chicago', 'Berlin', 'Lima'] cities.addObject('Berlin'); // ['Chicago', 'Berlin', 'Lima'] |
Parameters:
- obj *
- object to add, if not already present
Returns:
- Ember.Array
- receiver
addObjects
(objects)
Object
public
Adds each object in the passed enumerable to the receiver.
Parameters:
- objects Ember.Enumerable
- the objects to add.
Returns:
- Object
- receiver
any
(callback, target)
Boolean
public
Returns true
if the passed function returns true for any item in the
enumeration. This corresponds with the some()
method in JavaScript 1.6.
The callback method you provide should have the following signature (all parameters are optional):
1 |
function(item, index, enumerable);
|
item
is the current item in the iteration.index
is the current index in the iteration.enumerable
is the enumerable object itself.
It should return the true
to include the item in the results, false
otherwise.
Note that in addition to a callback, you can also pass an optional target
object that will be set as this
on the context. This is a good way
to give your iterator function access to the current object.
Usage Example:
1 2 3 |
if (people.any(isManager)) {
Paychecks.addBiggerBonus();
}
|
Parameters:
- callback Function
- The callback to execute
- target [Object]
- The target object to use
Returns:
- Boolean
- `true` if the passed function returns `true` for any item
arrayContentDidChange
(startIdx, removeAmt, addAmt)
Ember.Array
public
If you are implementing an object that supports Ember.Array
, call this
method just after the array content changes to notify any observers and
invalidate any related properties. Pass the starting index of the change
as well as a delta of the amounts to change.
Parameters:
- startIdx Number
- The starting index in the array that did change.
- removeAmt Number
- The number of items that were removed. If you pass `null` assumes 0
- addAmt Number
- The number of items that were added. If you pass `null` assumes 0.
Returns:
- Ember.Array
- receiver
arrayContentWillChange
(startIdx, removeAmt, addAmt)
Ember.Array
public
If you are implementing an object that supports Ember.Array
, call this
method just before the array content changes to notify any observers and
invalidate any related properties. Pass the starting index of the change
as well as a delta of the amounts to change.
Parameters:
- startIdx Number
- The starting index in the array that will change.
- removeAmt Number
- The number of items that will be removed. If you pass `null` assumes 0
- addAmt Number
- The number of items that will be added. If you pass `null` assumes 0.
Returns:
- Ember.Array
- receiver
clear
Ember.Array
public
Remove all elements from the array. This is useful if you want to reuse an existing array without having to recreate it.
1 2 3 4 5 |
var colors = ['red', 'green', 'blue']; color.length(); // 3 colors.clear(); // [] colors.length(); // 0 |
Returns:
- Ember.Array
- An empty Array.
compact
Array
public
Returns a copy of the array with all null
and undefined
elements removed.
1 2 |
var arr = ['a', null, 'c', undefined]; arr.compact(); // ['a', 'c'] |
Returns:
- Array
- the array without null and undefined elements.
contains
(obj)
Boolean
public
Returns true
if the passed object can be found in the receiver. The
default version will iterate through the enumerable until the object
is found. You may want to override this with a more efficient version.
1 2 3 4 |
var arr = ['a', 'b', 'c']; arr.contains('a'); // true arr.contains('z'); // false |
Parameters:
- obj Object
- The object to search for.
Returns:
- Boolean
- `true` if object is found in enumerable.
enumerableContentDidChange
(removing, adding)
private
Invoke this method when the contents of your enumerable has changed. This will notify any observers watching for content changes. If you are implementing an ordered enumerable (such as an array), also pass the start and end values where the content changed so that it can be used to notify range observers.
Parameters:
- removing Ember.Enumerable|Number
- An enumerable of the objects to be removed or the number of items to be removed.
- adding Ember.Enumerable|Number
- An enumerable of the objects to be added or the number of items to be added.
enumerableContentWillChange
(removing, adding)
private
Invoke this method just before the contents of your enumerable will change. You can either omit the parameters completely or pass the objects to be removed or added if available or just a count.
Parameters:
- removing Ember.Enumerable|Number
- An enumerable of the objects to be removed or the number of items to be removed.
- adding Ember.Enumerable|Number
- An enumerable of the objects to be added or the number of items to be added.
every
(callback, target)
Boolean
public
Returns true
if the passed function returns true for every item in the
enumeration. This corresponds with the every()
method in JavaScript 1.6.
The callback method you provide should have the following signature (all parameters are optional):
1 |
function(item, index, enumerable);
|
item
is the current item in the iteration.index
is the current index in the iteration.enumerable
is the enumerable object itself.
It should return the true
or false
.
Note that in addition to a callback, you can also pass an optional target
object that will be set as this
on the context. This is a good way
to give your iterator function access to the current object.
Example Usage:
1 2 3 |
if (people.every(isEngineer)) {
Paychecks.addBigBonus();
}
|
Parameters:
- callback Function
- The callback to execute
- target [Object]
- The target object to use
Returns:
- Boolean
filter
(callback, target)
Array
public
Returns an array with all of the items in the enumeration that the passed
function returns true for. This method corresponds to filter()
defined in
JavaScript 1.6.
The callback method you provide should have the following signature (all parameters are optional):
1 |
function(item, index, enumerable);
|
item
is the current item in the iteration.index
is the current index in the iteration.enumerable
is the enumerable object itself.
It should return true
to include the item in the results, false
otherwise.
Note that in addition to a callback, you can also pass an optional target
object that will be set as this
on the context. This is a good way
to give your iterator function access to the current object.
Parameters:
- callback Function
- The callback to execute
- target [Object]
- The target object to use
Returns:
- Array
- A filtered array.
filterBy
(key, value)
Array
public
Returns an array with just the items with the matched property. You
can pass an optional second argument with the target value. Otherwise
this will match any property that evaluates to true
.
Parameters:
- key String
- the property to test
- value [*]
- optional value to test against.
Returns:
- Array
- filtered array
find
(callback, target)
Object
public
Returns the first item in the array for which the callback returns true.
This method works similar to the filter()
method defined in JavaScript 1.6
except that it will stop working on the array once a match is found.
The callback method you provide should have the following signature (all parameters are optional):
1 |
function(item, index, enumerable);
|
item
is the current item in the iteration.index
is the current index in the iteration.enumerable
is the enumerable object itself.
It should return the true
to include the item in the results, false
otherwise.
Note that in addition to a callback, you can also pass an optional target
object that will be set as this
on the context. This is a good way
to give your iterator function access to the current object.
Parameters:
- callback Function
- The callback to execute
- target [Object]
- The target object to use
Returns:
- Object
- Found item or `undefined`.
findBy
(key, value)
Object
public
Returns the first item with a property matching the passed value. You
can pass an optional second argument with the target value. Otherwise
this will match any property that evaluates to true
.
This method works much like the more generic find()
method.
Returns:
- Object
- found item or `undefined`
forEach
(callback, target)
Object
public
Iterates through the enumerable, calling the passed function on each
item. This method corresponds to the forEach()
method defined in
JavaScript 1.6.
The callback method you provide should have the following signature (all parameters are optional):
1 |
function(item, index, enumerable);
|
item
is the current item in the iteration.index
is the current index in the iteration.enumerable
is the enumerable object itself.
Note that in addition to a callback, you can also pass an optional target
object that will be set as this
on the context. This is a good way
to give your iterator function access to the current object.
Parameters:
- callback Function
- The callback to execute
- target [Object]
- The target object to use
Returns:
- Object
- receiver
getEach
(key)
Array
public
Alias for mapBy
Parameters:
- key String
- name of the property
Returns:
- Array
- The mapped array.
indexOf
(object, startAt)
Number
public
Returns the index of the given object's first occurrence.
If no startAt
argument is given, the starting location to
search is 0. If it's negative, will count backward from
the end of the array. Returns -1 if no match is found.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 |
var arr = ['a', 'b', 'c', 'd', 'a']; arr.indexOf('a'); // 0 arr.indexOf('z'); // -1 arr.indexOf('a', 2); // 4 arr.indexOf('a', -1); // 4 arr.indexOf('b', 3); // -1 arr.indexOf('a', 100); // -1 |
Parameters:
- object Object
- the item to search for
- startAt Number
- optional starting location to search, default 0
Returns:
- Number
- index or -1 if not found
insertAt
(idx, object)
Ember.Array
public
This will use the primitive replace()
method to insert an object at the
specified index.
1 2 3 4 |
var colors = ['red', 'green', 'blue']; colors.insertAt(2, 'yellow'); // ['red', 'green', 'yellow', 'blue'] colors.insertAt(5, 'orange'); // Error: Index out of range |
Parameters:
- idx Number
- index of insert the object at.
- object Object
- object to insert
Returns:
- Ember.Array
- receiver
invoke
(methodName, args)
Array
public
Invokes the named method on every object in the receiver that implements it. This method corresponds to the implementation in Prototype 1.6.
Parameters:
- methodName String
- the name of the method
- args Object...
- optional arguments to pass as well.
Returns:
- Array
- return values from calling invoke.
isAny
(key, value)
Boolean
public
Returns true
if the passed property resolves to the value of the second
argument for any item in the enumerable. This method is often simpler/faster
than using a callback.
Parameters:
Returns:
- Boolean
isEvery
(key, value)
Boolean
public
Returns true
if the passed property resolves to the value of the second
argument for all items in the enumerable. This method is often simpler/faster
than using a callback.
Parameters:
Returns:
- Boolean
lastIndexOf
(object, startAt)
Number
public
Returns the index of the given object's last occurrence.
If no startAt
argument is given, the search starts from
the last position. If it's negative, will count backward
from the end of the array. Returns -1 if no match is found.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 |
var arr = ['a', 'b', 'c', 'd', 'a']; arr.lastIndexOf('a'); // 4 arr.lastIndexOf('z'); // -1 arr.lastIndexOf('a', 2); // 0 arr.lastIndexOf('a', -1); // 4 arr.lastIndexOf('b', 3); // 1 arr.lastIndexOf('a', 100); // 4 |
Parameters:
- object Object
- the item to search for
- startAt Number
- optional starting location to search, default 0
Returns:
- Number
- index or -1 if not found
map
(callback, target)
Array
public
Maps all of the items in the enumeration to another value, returning
a new array. This method corresponds to map()
defined in JavaScript 1.6.
The callback method you provide should have the following signature (all parameters are optional):
1 |
function(item, index, enumerable);
|
item
is the current item in the iteration.index
is the current index in the iteration.enumerable
is the enumerable object itself.
It should return the mapped value.
Note that in addition to a callback, you can also pass an optional target
object that will be set as this
on the context. This is a good way
to give your iterator function access to the current object.
Parameters:
- callback Function
- The callback to execute
- target [Object]
- The target object to use
Returns:
- Array
- The mapped array.
mapBy
(key)
Array
public
Similar to map, this specialized function returns the value of the named property on all items in the enumeration.
Parameters:
- key String
- name of the property
Returns:
- Array
- The mapped array.
nextObject
(index, previousObject, context)
Object
private
Required. You must implement this method to apply this mixin.
Implement this method to make your class enumerable.
This method will be called repeatedly during enumeration. The index value will always begin with 0 and increment monotonically. You don't have to rely on the index value to determine what object to return, but you should always check the value and start from the beginning when you see the requested index is 0.
The previousObject
is the object that was returned from the last call
to nextObject
for the current iteration. This is a useful way to
manage iteration if you are tracing a linked list, for example.
Finally the context parameter will always contain a hash you can use as a "scratchpad" to maintain any other state you need in order to iterate properly. The context object is reused and is not reset between iterations so make sure you setup the context with a fresh state whenever the index parameter is 0.
Generally iterators will continue to call nextObject
until the index
reaches the current length-1. If you run out of data before this
time for some reason, you should simply return undefined.
The default implementation of this method simply looks up the index. This works great on any Array-like objects.
Parameters:
- index Number
- the current index of the iteration
- previousObject Object
- the value returned by the last call to `nextObject`.
- context Object
- a context object you can use to maintain state.
Returns:
- Object
- the next object in the iteration or undefined
objectAt
(idx)
*
public
Returns the object at the given index
. If the given index
is negative
or is greater or equal than the array length, returns undefined
.
This is one of the primitives you must implement to support Ember.Array
.
If your object supports retrieving the value of an array item using get()
(i.e. myArray.get(0)
), then you do not need to implement this method
yourself.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 |
var arr = ['a', 'b', 'c', 'd']; arr.objectAt(0); // 'a' arr.objectAt(3); // 'd' arr.objectAt(-1); // undefined arr.objectAt(4); // undefined arr.objectAt(5); // undefined |
Parameters:
- idx Number
- The index of the item to return.
Returns:
- *
- item at index or undefined
objectsAt
(indexes)
Array
public
This returns the objects at the specified indexes, using objectAt
.
1 2 3 4 |
var arr = ['a', 'b', 'c', 'd']; arr.objectsAt([0, 1, 2]); // ['a', 'b', 'c'] arr.objectsAt([2, 3, 4]); // ['c', 'd', undefined] |
Parameters:
- indexes Array
- An array of indexes of items to return.
Returns:
- Array
popObject
public
Pop object from array or nil if none are left. Works just like pop()
but
it is KVO-compliant.
1 2 3 4 |
var colors = ['red', 'green', 'blue']; colors.popObject(); // 'blue' console.log(colors); // ['red', 'green'] |
Returns:
- object
pushObject
(obj)
public
Push the object onto the end of the array. Works just like push()
but it
is KVO-compliant.
1 2 3 4 |
var colors = ['red', 'green']; colors.pushObject('black'); // ['red', 'green', 'black'] colors.pushObject(['yellow']); // ['red', 'green', ['yellow']] |
Parameters:
- obj *
- object to push
Returns:
- object same object passed as a param
pushObjects
(objects)
Ember.Array
public
Add the objects in the passed numerable to the end of the array. Defers notifying observers of the change until all objects are added.
1 2 3 |
var colors = ['red']; colors.pushObjects(['yellow', 'orange']); // ['red', 'yellow', 'orange'] |
Parameters:
- objects Ember.Enumerable
- the objects to add
Returns:
- Ember.Array
- receiver
reduce
(callback, initialValue, reducerProperty)
Object
public
This will combine the values of the enumerator into a single value. It
is a useful way to collect a summary value from an enumeration. This
corresponds to the reduce()
method defined in JavaScript 1.8.
The callback method you provide should have the following signature (all parameters are optional):
1 |
function(previousValue, item, index, enumerable);
|
previousValue
is the value returned by the last call to the iterator.item
is the current item in the iteration.index
is the current index in the iteration.enumerable
is the enumerable object itself.
Return the new cumulative value.
In addition to the callback you can also pass an initialValue
. An error
will be raised if you do not pass an initial value and the enumerator is
empty.
Note that unlike the other methods, this method does not allow you to pass a target object to set as this for the callback. It's part of the spec. Sorry.
Parameters:
Returns:
- Object
- The reduced value.
reject
(callback, target)
Array
public
Returns an array with all of the items in the enumeration where the passed function returns false. This method is the inverse of filter().
The callback method you provide should have the following signature (all parameters are optional):
1 |
function(item, index, enumerable);
|
- item is the current item in the iteration.
- index is the current index in the iteration
- enumerable is the enumerable object itself.
It should return a falsey value to include the item in the results.
Note that in addition to a callback, you can also pass an optional target object that will be set as "this" on the context. This is a good way to give your iterator function access to the current object.
Parameters:
- callback Function
- The callback to execute
- target [Object]
- The target object to use
Returns:
- Array
- A rejected array.
rejectBy
(key, value)
Array
public
Returns an array with the items that do not have truthy values for key. You can pass an optional second argument with the target value. Otherwise this will match any property that evaluates to false.
Returns:
- Array
- rejected array
removeArrayObserver
(target, opts)
Ember.Array
public
Removes an array observer from the object if the observer is current registered. Calling this method multiple times with the same object will have no effect.
Parameters:
- target Object
- The object observing the array.
- opts Object
- Optional hash of configuration options including `willChange` and `didChange` option.
Returns:
- Ember.Array
- receiver
removeAt
(start, len)
Ember.Array
public
Remove an object at the specified index using the replace()
primitive
method. You can pass either a single index, or a start and a length.
If you pass a start and length that is beyond the
length this method will throw an OUT_OF_RANGE_EXCEPTION
.
1 2 3 4 5 |
var colors = ['red', 'green', 'blue', 'yellow', 'orange']; colors.removeAt(0); // ['green', 'blue', 'yellow', 'orange'] colors.removeAt(2, 2); // ['green', 'blue'] colors.removeAt(4, 2); // Error: Index out of range |
Parameters:
- start Number
- index, start of range
- len Number
- length of passing range
Returns:
- Ember.Array
- receiver
removeEnumerableObserver
(target, opts)
private
Removes a registered enumerable observer.
Parameters:
- target Object
- opts [Object]
Returns:
- this
removeObject
(obj)
Ember.Array
public
Remove all occurrences of an object in the array.
1 2 3 4 5 |
var cities = ['Chicago', 'Berlin', 'Lima', 'Chicago']; cities.removeObject('Chicago'); // ['Berlin', 'Lima'] cities.removeObject('Lima'); // ['Berlin'] cities.removeObject('Tokyo') // ['Berlin'] |
Parameters:
- obj *
- object to remove
Returns:
- Ember.Array
- receiver
removeObjects
(objects)
Object
public
Removes each object in the passed enumerable from the receiver.
Parameters:
- objects Ember.Enumerable
- the objects to remove
Returns:
- Object
- receiver
replace
(idx, amt, objects)
public
Required. You must implement this method to apply this mixin.
This is one of the primitives you must implement to support Ember.Array
.
You should replace amt objects started at idx with the objects in the
passed array. You should also call this.enumerableContentDidChange()
Parameters:
- idx Number
- Starting index in the array to replace. If idx >= length, then append to the end of the array.
- amt Number
- Number of elements that should be removed from the array, starting at *idx*.
- objects Array
- An array of zero or more objects that should be inserted into the array at *idx*
reverseObjects
Ember.Array
public
Reverse objects in the array. Works just like reverse()
but it is
KVO-compliant.
Returns:
- Ember.Array
- receiver
setEach
(key, value)
Object
public
Sets the value on the named property for each member. This is more
efficient than using other methods defined on this helper. If the object
implements Ember.Observable, the value will be changed to set(),
otherwise
it will be set directly. null
objects are skipped.
Parameters:
- key String
- The key to set
- value Object
- The object to set
Returns:
- Object
- receiver
setObjects
(objects)
Ember.Array
public
Replace all the receiver's content with content of the argument. If argument is an empty array receiver will be cleared.
1 2 3 4 |
var colors = ['red', 'green', 'blue']; colors.setObjects(['black', 'white']); // ['black', 'white'] colors.setObjects([]); // [] |
Parameters:
- objects Ember.Array
- array whose content will be used for replacing the content of the receiver
Returns:
- Ember.Array
- receiver with the new content
shiftObject
public
Shift an object from start of array or nil if none are left. Works just
like shift()
but it is KVO-compliant.
1 2 3 4 |
var colors = ['red', 'green', 'blue']; colors.shiftObject(); // 'red' console.log(colors); // ['green', 'blue'] |
Returns:
- object
slice
(beginIndex, endIndex)
Array
public
Returns a new array that is a slice of the receiver. This implementation uses the observable array methods to retrieve the objects for the new slice.
1 2 3 4 5 |
var arr = ['red', 'green', 'blue']; arr.slice(0); // ['red', 'green', 'blue'] arr.slice(0, 2); // ['red', 'green'] arr.slice(1, 100); // ['green', 'blue'] |
Parameters:
- beginIndex Number
- (Optional) index to begin slicing from.
- endIndex Number
- (Optional) index to end the slice at (but not included).
Returns:
- Array
- New array with specified slice
sortBy
(property)
Array
public
Converts the enumerable into an array and sorts by the keys specified in the argument.
You may provide multiple arguments to sort by multiple properties.
Parameters:
- property String
- name(s) to sort on
Returns:
- Array
- The sorted array.
toArray
Array
public
Simply converts the enumerable into a genuine array. The order is not guaranteed. Corresponds to the method implemented by Prototype.
Returns:
- Array
- the enumerable as an array.
uniq
Ember.Enumerable
public
Returns a new enumerable that contains only unique values. The default implementation returns an array regardless of the receiver type.
1 2 |
var arr = ['a', 'a', 'b', 'b']; arr.uniq(); // ['a', 'b'] |
This only works on primitive data types, e.g. Strings, Numbers, etc.
Returns:
unshiftObject
(obj)
public
Unshift an object to start of array. Works just like unshift()
but it is
KVO-compliant.
1 2 3 4 |
var colors = ['red']; colors.unshiftObject('yellow'); // ['yellow', 'red'] colors.unshiftObject(['black']); // [['black'], 'yellow', 'red'] |
Parameters:
- obj *
- object to unshift
Returns:
- object same object passed as a param
unshiftObjects
(objects)
Ember.Array
public
Adds the named objects to the beginning of the array. Defers notifying observers until all objects have been added.
1 2 3 4 |
var colors = ['red']; colors.unshiftObjects(['black', 'white']); // ['black', 'white', 'red'] colors.unshiftObjects('yellow'); // Type Error: 'undefined' is not a function |
Parameters:
- objects Ember.Enumerable
- the objects to add
Returns:
- Ember.Array
- receiver
without
(value)
Ember.Enumerable
public
Returns a new enumerable that excludes the passed value. The default implementation returns an array regardless of the receiver type unless the receiver does not contain the value.
1 2 |
var arr = ['a', 'b', 'a', 'c']; arr.without('a'); // ['b', 'c'] |
Parameters:
- value Object
Returns:
@each
public
Returns a special object that can be used to observe individual properties on the array. Just get an equivalent property on this object and it will return an enumerable that maps automatically to the named key on the member objects.
@each
should only be used in a non-terminal context. Example:
1 2 3 |
myMethod: computed('posts.@each.author', function(){ ... }); |
If you merely want to watch for the array being changed, like an object being
replaced, added or removed, use []
instead of @each
.
1 2 3 |
myMethod: computed('posts.[]', function(){ ... }); |
[]
public
This is the handler for the special array content property. If you get this property, it will return this. If you set this property to a new array, it will replace the current content.
This property overrides the default property defined in Ember.Enumerable
.
Returns:
- this
firstObject
Object
public
Helper method returns the first object from a collection. This is usually used by bindings and other parts of the framework to extract a single object if the enumerable contains only one item.
If you override this method, you should implement it so that it will
always return the same value each time it is called. If your enumerable
contains only one object, this method should always return that object.
If your enumerable is empty, this method should return undefined
.
1 2 3 4 5 |
var arr = ['a', 'b', 'c']; arr.get('firstObject'); // 'a' var arr = []; arr.get('firstObject'); // undefined |
Returns:
- Object
- the object or undefined
hasArrayObservers
Boolean
public
Becomes true whenever the array currently has observers watching changes on the array.
hasEnumerableObservers
Boolean
private
Becomes true whenever the array currently has observers watching changes on the array.
lastObject
Object
public
Helper method returns the last object from a collection. If your enumerable
contains only one object, this method should always return that object.
If your enumerable is empty, this method should return undefined
.
1 2 3 4 5 |
var arr = ['a', 'b', 'c']; arr.get('lastObject'); // 'c' var arr = []; arr.get('lastObject'); // undefined |
Returns:
- Object
- the last object or undefined
length
Number
public
Required. You must implement this method to apply this mixin.
Your array must support the length
property. Your replace methods should
set this property whenever it changes.