问题
I have three questions about routing in Backbone.js / Marionette.js :
- 1) How can I get a list of all the routes my application's routers have registered ?
For example for Express.js (in Node.js) it would be app.routes
.
I'm trying to do the same with Backbone.js / Marionette.js but couldn't find any property or method that did this.
- 2) I want to clean-up my URLs and remove the hashtag "#" in front of them, I know that they trigger the Routers so how can I manage to do this ?
I found the following script that prototypes the Backbone router, but it's more of a hack than a stable solution : Simple backbone routing without hash URLs
- 3) Is is possible to have sub-routers in Backbone.js / Marionette.js ?
What I mean by sub-router is a router which only handles a part of a url, e.g :
var AppRouter = Backbone.Router.extend({
routes: {
'articles' : 'MyArticleRouter'
}
});
var MyArticleRouter = Backbone.Router.extend({
routes: {
'science' : 'someMethod',
'literrature' : 'someOtherMethod'
}
});
This would categorise my URLs a little bit more by letting me define the main routes in AppRouter and all the subroutes (part after the second slash "/") in category-specific sub-routers.
So for the following URL : "hostname/articles/science", the routing process would look something like this :
- 1) pass "/articles/science" to AppRouter
- 2) AppRouter splits the URI and takes the "/articles" part
- 3) AppRouter finds the registered "/articles" route
- 4) AppRouter recognises that MyArticleRouter is bound to that URI element
- 5) AppRouter forwards the routing to that router and only passes the "/science" element as a route
- 6) MyArticleRouter routes "/science" to the someMethod() and runs it
Thank you in advance !
回答1:
Answer for #1:
All the routes are registered in Backbone.history.handlers
.
Answer for #2:
You can add a handler to every link in your site:
var application = new Backbone.Marionette.Application();
application.addInitializer(function(options) {
// Add class to target a browser, not as standalone app.
if(window.navigator.standalone != true) {
$('body').addClass('no-standalone');
}
// Prevent internal links from causing a page refresh.
$(document).on('click', 'a', function(event) {
var fragment = Backbone.history.getFragment($(this).attr('href'));
var matched = _.any(Backbone.history.handlers, function(handler) {
return handler.route.test(fragment);
});
if (matched) {
event.preventDefault();
Backbone.history.navigate(fragment, { trigger: true });
}
});
});
Of course make sure you use pushState:
if (!Backbone.history.started) {
Backbone.history.start({ pushState: true });
}
That last snippet must be run after you have initialized all your routers.
Answer for #3:
This may work a little to split your routes:
define([
'backbone',
'underscore',
'routers/dashboard',
'routers/anotherroute1',
'routers/anotherroute2'
],
function(Backbone, _, DashboardRouter, AnotherRoute1, AnotherRoute2) {
'use strict';
var application = new Backbone.Marionette.Application();
application.addInitializer(function () {
_.each([DashboardRouter, AnotherRoute1, AnotherRoute2], function(router) {
new router();
});
if (!Backbone.history.started) {
Backbone.history.start({ pushState: true });
}
});
return application;
});
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/18234427/routing-in-backbone-js-marionette-js-no-hashtags-route-list-and-sub-routers