I have a model with several object:
//Model
Friend = Backbone.Model.extend({
//Create a model to hold friend attribute
name: null,
});
//objects
va
Backbone collections support the underscorejs find
method, so using that should work.
things.find(function(model) { return model.get('name') === 'Lee'; });
The simplest way is to use "idAttribute" option of Backbone Model to let Backbone know the that you want to use "name" as your Model Id.
Friend = Backbone.Model.extend({
//Create a model to hold friend attribute
name: null,
idAttribute: 'name'
});
Now you can directly use Collection.get() method to retrieve a friend using his name. This way Backbone does not loop through all of your Friend models in the Collection but can directly fetch a model based on its "name".
var lee = friends.get('Lee');
You can call findWhere()
on Backbone collections, that will return exactly the model you are looking for.
Example:
var lee = friends.findWhere({ name: 'Lee' });
For simple attribute based searches you can use Collection#where:
where
collection.where(attributes)
Return an array of all the models in a collection that match the passed attributes. Useful for simple cases of
filter
.
So if friends
is your Friends
instance, then:
var lees = friends.where({ name: 'Lee' });
There's also Collection#findWhere (a later addition as noted in the comments):
findWhere
collection.findWhere(attributes)
Just like where, but directly returns only the first model in the collection that matches the passed attributes.
so if you're only after one then you can say things like:
var lee = friends.findWhere({ name: 'Lee' });