I’ve built a Backbone-powered library that allows a user to add/remove items, much like the Todos example.
Every time an item is add or removed – or the entire collection is refreshed – I need two other select elements that are on other areas of the page to re-populate with the latest items as options. How would this be implemented, do I simply re-populate the select element in the render function of the view which holds a reference to the collection?
I’m tempted to create a view just for the select options but this seems like overkill, especially when considering the view doesn’t need to re-act to any events. The select options are used by other views to populate form data.
You’re correct: create a unique view for each select option. It’s not overkill at all; that’s what Views are for. They listen for events from their models, in this case the item list, and redraw themselves upon receiving an event. They have container designations, so once you’ve established those in the parameters for the View subclass, you never need to think about them again. You can style them independently.
That’s the whole point of the Views being the way they are.
More importantly, you could also abstract out “view of a list of things,” and then each of your specific views can inherit from that view, and add two features: the filter (“latest”), and the renderer. You have to write the renderer anyway; you may as well exploit a little syntatic sugar to make it clear what you’re rendering where. It’s better than writing comments.