I have two backbone models, loaded from server:
var Model = Backbone.Model.extend({});
var SubModel = Backbone.Model.extend({});
var SubCollection = Backbone.Collection.extend({
model: SubModel
});
var m = new Model();
m.fetch({success: function(model)
{
model.submodels = new SubCollection();
model.submodels.url = "/sub/" + model.get("id");
model.submodels.fetch();
}});
So, the server has to send two separate responses. For example:
{ name: "Model1", id: 1 } // For Model fetch
and
[{ name: "Submodel1", id: 1 }, { name: "Submodel2", id: 2 }] // For Submodel collection fetch
Is there a way to fetch a Model instance with Submodel collection at once, like:
{
name: "Model1",
id: 1,
submodels: [{ name: "Submodel1", id: 2 }, { name: "Submodel1", id: 2 }]
}
To be able to do that is up to your back-end – it doesn’t really have anything to do with Backbone.
Can you configure your back-end technology to return related models as nested resources?
If your back-end is Rails, for instance, and your models are related in ActiveRecord, one way of doing this is something like
What back-end technology are you using?
Edit:
Sorry, misunderstood the gist of your question, once you’ve got your back-end returning the JSON in the proper format, yeah, there are things you need to do in Backbone to be able to handle it.
Backbone-Relational
One way to deal with it is to use Backbone-Relational, a plugin for handling related models.
You define related models through a ‘relations’ property:
When your Model fetches the JSON, it will automatically create a SubCollection under the ‘submodels’ property and populate it with SubModels – one for each JSON object in the array.
jsfiddle for backbone-relational: http://jsfiddle.net/4Zx5X/12/
By Hand
You can do this by hand if you want as well. In involves overriding the parse function for your Model class (forgive me if my JS is not 100% correct – been doing CoffeeScript so much lately its hardwired in my brain)
parse() runs before initialize() and before the attributes hash is set up, so you can’t access model.attributes, and model.set() fails, so we have to set the collection as a direct property of the model, and not as a “property” that you would access with get/set.
Depending on what you want to happen on “save()” you may have to override `toJSON’ to get your serialized version of the model to look like what your API expects.
jsfiddle:
http://jsfiddle.net/QEdmB/44/