Mike Grassotti's Minimum Viable Ember.js QuickStart Guide
This quickstart guide should get you from zero to slightly-more-than-zero in a couple of minutes. When done, you should feel somewhat confident that ember.js actually works and hopefully will be interested enough to learn more.
WARNING: Don't just try this guide then think ember-sucks cause "I could write that quickstart-guide better in jQuery or Fortran" or whatever. I am not trying to sell you on ember or anything, this guide is little more than a hello-world.
Step 0 - Check out jsFiddle
this jsFiddle has all the code from this answer
Step 1 - Include ember.js and other required libraries
Ember.js requires both jQuery and Handlebars. Be sure those libraries are loaded before ember.js:
<script type='text/javascript' src='http://code.jquery.com/jquery-1.9.1.js'></script>
<script type='text/javascript' src="http://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/handlebars.js/1.0.0-rc.3/handlebars.js"></script>
<script type='text/javascript' src="http://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/ember.js/1.0.0-rc.1/ember.js"></script>
Step 2 - Describe your application's user interface using one or more handlebars templates
By default ember will replace body of your html page using content of one or more handlbars templates. Someday these templates will be in separate .hbs files assembled by sprockets or maybe grunt.js. For now we will keep everything in one file and use script tags.
First, let's add a single application
template:
<script type="text/x-handlebars" data-template-name="application">
<div class="container">
<h1>Ember.js is easy?<small> Minimum Viable Ember.js QuickStart Guide</small></h1>
<p>{{message}}</p>
</div>
</script>
Step 3 - Initialize your ember application
Just add another script block with App = Ember.Application.create({});
to load ember.js and initialize your application.
<script type='text/javascript'>
App = Ember.Application.create({});
</script>
That's all you need to create a basic ember application, but it's not very interesting.
Step 4: Add a controller
Ember evaluates each handlebars templates in the context of a controller. So application
template has a matching ApplicationController
. Ember creates is automatically if you don't define one, but here let's customize it to add a message property.
<script type='text/javascript'>
App.ApplicationController = Ember.Controller.extend({
message: 'This is the application template'
});
</script>
Step 5: Define routes + more controllers and templates
Ember router makes it easy to combine templates/controllers into an application.
<script type='text/javascript'>
App.Router.map(function() {
this.route("index", { path: "/" });
this.route("list", { path: "/list" });
});
App.IndexController = Ember.Controller.extend({
message: 'Hello! See how index.hbs is evaluated in the context of IndexController'
});
App.ListRoute = Ember.Route.extend({
setupController: function(controller) {
controller.set('content', ['angular.js', 'backbone.js', 'ember.js']);
}
});
</script>
To make this work, we modify our the application template by adding an {{outlet}}
helper. Ember router will render appropriate template into the outlet depending on user's route. We will also use the {{linkTo}}
helper to add navigation links.
<script type="text/x-handlebars" data-template-name="application">
<div class="container">
<h1>Ember.js is easy?<small> Minimum Viable Ember.js QuickStart Guide</small></h1>
<p>{{message}}</p>
<div class="row">
{{#linkTo index class="span3 btn btn-large btn-block"}}Home{{/linkTo}}
{{#linkTo list class="span3 btn btn-large btn-block"}}List{{/linkTo}}
</div>
{{outlet}}
</div>
</script>
<script type="text/x-handlebars" data-template-name="list">
<h3 class="demo-panel-title">This is the list template</h3>
<ul>
{{#each item in content}}
<li>{{item}}</li>
{{/each}}
</ul>
</script>
<script type="text/x-handlebars" data-template-name="index">
<h3 class="demo-panel-title">This is the index template</h3>
<p>{{message}}</p>
</script>
Done!
A working example of this application is available here.
You can use this jsFiddle as a starting point for your own ember apps
Next Steps...
- Read the Ember Guides
- Maybe buy the Peepcode screencast
- Ask questions here on Stack Overflow or in ember IRC
For reference, my original answer:
My question is for any Ember.js expert, and certainly the respective tutorial authors: When should I use design patterns from one tutorial, and when from the other?
These two tutorials represent best practices at the time they were written. For sure there is something that can be learned from each, both are sadly doomed to become out of date because ember.js is moving very quickly. Of the two, Trek's is far more current.
What components of each are personal preferences, and what components will prove essential as my app matures?
If you are developing a new ember application I would not recommend following the Code Lab approach. It is just too out-of-date to be useful.
In Code Lab's design, Ember seems to be closer to existing within the application (even though it is 100% of his custom JS), whereas Trek's application seems to live more within Ember.
Your comment is bang-on. CodeLab is making taking advantage of core ember components and accessing them from global scope. When it was written (9 months ago) this was pretty common but today best-practice for writing ember applications is much closer to what Trek was doing.
That said, even Trek's tutorial is becoming out-of-date. Components that were required ApplicationView
and ApplicationController
are now generated by the framework itself.
By far the most current resource is the set of guides published at http://emberjs.com/guides/
- they have been written from the ground up over the last few weeks and reflect the latest (pre-release) version of ember.
I'd also check out trek's wip project here: https://github.com/trek/ember-todos-with-build-tools-tests-and-other-modern-conveniences
EDIT:
@sly7_7 : I'd also give an other example, using ember-data https://github.com/dgeb/ember_data_example