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ActiveResource for Angular.js

ActiveResource provides a Base class to make modelling with Angular easier. It provides associations, caching, API integration, validations, and Active Record pattern persistence methods.

Installation:

Download

With Bower

If you have bower install just run

bower install ngActiveResource --save-dev

Manually

To manually download head over to the latest release and hit the big 'source code' button.

Install

Once downloaded you'll find everything you need in the /dist directory, include either file and add it as a dependency in your module.

angular.module('app', ['ActiveResource']);

Note: Don't forget to include lodash.js before active-resource.js.

Installation:

In your bower.json:

"ngActiveResource": "latest"

Simple:

Say you want a form to add comments to a post:

<form ng-submit="comment.$save()">
    <input ng-model="comment.text">
    <input type="submit">
</form>

<div ng-repeat="comment in post.comments">
    {{comment.text}}
</div>

In your controller, all you have to setup is something like this:

Post.find(postId).then(function(response) {
    $scope.post      = response;
    $scope.comment   = $scope.post.comments.new();

    Comment.after('$save', function() {
        $scope.comment = $scope.post.comments.new();
    });
};

You don't even have to tell ng-repeat to load in the new comment. The new comment will already be added to the post by association. Simply tell the comment object on the scope to clear, so that the user can enter another comment.

Writing a Model:

Create an Angular factory or provider that relies on ActiveResource:

angular.module('app', ['ActiveResource'])
    .factory('Post', ['ActiveResource', function(ActiveResource) {

        function Post(data) {
            this.number('id');
            this.string('title');
            this.string('subtitle');

            this.computedProperty('fullTitle', function() {
                return this.title + this.subtitle;
            }, ['title', 'subtitle']);

            this.hasMany('comments');
            this.belongsTo('author');
        };

        Post.inherits(ActiveResource.Base);
        Post.api.set('http://api.faculty.com');
        Post.dependentDestroy('comments');

        return Post;
  });

The model is terse, but gains a lot of functionality from ActiveResource.Base.

It declares a has-many relationship on Comment, allowing it to say things like:

var post    = Post.new({ title: "My First Post" });
var comment = post.comments.new({ text: "Great post!" });

The new comment will be an instance of the class Comment, which will be defined in its own model.

It also declares a belongs-to relationship on Author. This allows it to say things like:

var author     = Author.new();
comment.author = author;
comment.$save().then(function(response) { comment = response; });

This will also cause author.comments to include this instance of Comment.

Post also declares a dependent-destroy relationship on comments, meaning:

Post.$delete().then(function(response) { post = comment = response; });

expect(post).not.toBeDefined();
expect(comment).not.toBeDefined();
expect(Post.find({ title: "My First Post" }).not.toBeDefined();
expect(Comment.find({ text: "Great post!" }).not.toBeDefined();

This means the post and its comments have been deleted both locally and from the database.

The astute reader will notice methods prefaced with $ are interacting with an API. The API calls are established in the model definition under Post.api.set().

Computed Properties:

Following the syntax of Ember.js' computed properties, you can create properties that auto-magically update with or without Angular's two-way binding:

function TShirt() {
    this.number('price');
    
    this.computedProperty('salePrice', function() {
        return this.price - (this.price * 0.2);
    }, 'price');
    
    this.computedProperty('superSalePrice', function() {
        return this.price - this.salePrice;
    }, ['price', 'salePrice']);
}

Establish Associations:

A has many association can be setup by naming the field. If the field name is also the name of the provider that contains the foreign model, this is all you have to say. If the name of the provider is different, you can set it explicitly via the provider option:

this.hasMany('comments', { provider: 'CommentModel' });

Foreign keys will also be intuited. For instance:

this.belongsTo('post');

Expect the model to define a post_id attribute mapping to the primary key of the post to which it belongs. If the foreign key is different, you can set it explicitly:

this.belongsTo('post', { foreign_key: 'my_post_id' });

Any number of options can be set on the association:

this.belongsTo('post', { provider: 'PostModel', foreign_key: 'my_post_id' });

Methods:

ActiveResource adds two types of methods to your models and instances:

  1. API-updating methods. These are prefaced with $, such as $create, $save, $update, and $delete, and are the 'unsafe' methods in a RESTful API (POST, PUT, and DELETE). These methods will call the API using the URLs you've set as ModelName.api.createURL, ModelName.api.updateURL, and ModelName.api.deleteURL. The api.set method sets default API URLs for you, but you can override these defaults by setting them explicitly.

  2. Local-instance creating and finding methods. These include new, find, where, all, and update. new creates a new instance of a model on the client, and update updates that instance without issuing a PUT request. find will attempt to find local instances in the model's client-side cache before issuing a GET request, and where and all will always issue a GET request to ensure it has all instances of a model that match given terms. These are the 'safe' methods in a RESTful API (GET).

Query Interface:

Getting Set Up:

Best case scenario: You have an API that adheres to ActiveResource's RESTful convention. Here's that convention:

HTTP Verb CRUD Path Action Used To
GET Retrieve /users index Display a list of all users, or all users filtered by querystring
GET Retrieve /users/:id show Display a specific user, found by params or querystring
POST Create /users create Create a user
PUT Update /users/:id update Update a specific user
DELETE Destroy /users/:id destroy Delete a specific user

If you do have an API that follows these conventions, hooking it up to ActiveResource is as easy as:

Post.api.set('http://api.faculty.com');

Optionally, you can specify a format for your requests:

Post.api.set('http://api.faculty.com').format('json');

Many APIs are set up to respond with specified data types if they are specified in the URLs. A request like:

Post.find({id: 1});

Will send the request:

http://api.faculty.com/posts/1.json

If you need to override specific URLs:

Post.api.indexURL  = 'http://api.faculty.com/list-all-the-users';
Post.api.showURL   = 'http://api.faculty.com/show-me-user';
Post.api.deleteURL = 'http://api.faculty.com/show-me-user/:param.json';

Parameterized URLS versus Query Strings:

To signal to ActiveResource that you want it to replace parameters in your URL, simply type them following a colon:

Post.api.showURL = /posts/:id
Post.api.showURL = /posts/:_id  // MongoDB

The parameters themselves will be replaced:

Post.find({ id: 1 });
>> http://faculty.api.com/posts/1

If no parameters are not provided or your request utilizes parameters that are not specified in the search URL, then a querystring will be generated:

Post.findURL = 'http://api.faculty.com/posts/:id';
Post.find({author_id: 1});

// 'http://faculty.api.com/posts/?author_id=1'

The indexURL is intended as a search URL. It is not expected to be parameterized (though you can parameterize it). By default, that means it will search using a querystring:

Post.api.set('http://faculty.api.com').format('json');
Post.where({author_id: 1});

// 'http://faculty.api.com/posts.json/?author_id=1'

Find:

Post.find({ title: 'My Great Post' });

find is used to retrieve a single instance of a model. It is a method akin to the show action in a RESTful API. Therefore, it first attempts to use the showURL, and will fall back on the indexURL if a showURL is not defined.

find returns only the first instance it finds. If the instance is already stored into the browser's cache, it will not make a backend request. To force a backend request, you can add the forceGET request option:

Post.find({ title: 'My Great Post' }, { forceGET: true });

By default, find will also eagerly load a single level of associations. If a Post has many comments, and we find a post, then its comments will be loaded as well, but the comments will not load their authors, or other comment-based associations. To load associations' associations, pass the option:

{ overEager: true }

Warning: Over-eager loading is potentially very resource-intensive, and will often pull down sizeable portions of the database.

To lazily load associations (not load even the first level of associations, aka comments in the example above), pass the option:

{ lazy: true }

Let's say you're working with a sort of crummy API. It doesn't have an endpoint to find a single instance of a particular model, or it won't parse a variety of options (like title for our post). Maybe it only parses by id, and you must find the post by title. In that case, hit your index API (the endpoint that returns all instances of a given resource), and pass the option:

{ noInstanceEndpoint: true }

This option will do the parsing on the client-side for you to overcome the gnarly API.

Where:

Similar to the find method, but it will pull all instances matching the given parameters. Where will always query the backend, assuming that it does not have the necessary instances.

where is akin to the index action in a RESTful API, and therefore first attempts to use the indexURL, and will fall back on the showURL if an indexURL is not defined.

Post.where({ author_id: author.id })

All:

Returns all instances. Takes no parameters:

Post.all()

all is just a shorthand for a where request with no search parameters specified. It therefore will use the whereURL, if defined.

Promise-based:

All queries are promise-based:

Post.where({ author_id: author.id }).then(function(response) {
    post = response;
});

Custom Primary Keys

By default, models will assume a primary key field labeled id, but you can set a custom one like so:

function Post(attributes) {}
Post.primaryKey = '_id';

Destroy Dependent Associations

If you want a model to delete certain associated resources when they themselves are deleted, use dependentDestroy:

Post.dependentDestroy('comments');

Now when you destroy a post, any associated comments will also be destroyed.

Serialize/toJSON

The serialize and toJSON methods (aliases of one another) change associations to foreign keys and remove circular references.

Post.serialize()

These methods also take several options:

Post.serialize({ prettyPrint: true })

Prints a formatted JSON string.

Post.serialize({ includeEmptyKeys: true })

Changes instances of null or undefined to empty strings, in the event your backend requires all properties to be sent with values. If you include presence validations on these fields, they will still fail as empty strings, and will not be sent using the built-in methods.

var dummyData = { hi: 'there' };
post.toJSON({ instance: dummyData });

Can tap into ActiveResource's serialization method to serialize arbitrary Javascript objects. If the instance option is not passed, the model instance itself will be serialized.

serialize and toJSON are non-mutating methods. They will not change the instance itself. To save the serialized data as a variable, assign it:

var json = post.serialize();

Write Validations:

Models can describe validations required before data will be persisted successfully:

function User(data) {
    this.name  = data.name;
    this.email = data.email;
    
    this.validates({
        name: { presence: true },
        email: { format: { validates: true, message: 'Must provide a valid email.' } }
    });
});

Validations also work with the Simple Form directive to perform easy form styling.

Helper Methods:

user.$valid
>> false 

user.$invalid
>> true

user.$errors
>> { name: ['Must be defined'] }

user.validate('name')
>> true

user.validateIfErrored('name')
>> true

Usage in Forms:

Helper methods make form validation simple:

<input ng-model="user.name" ng-blur="user.validate('name')">

Displaying errors is equally simple. Errors will only be added for a given field once it's been validated. Validate them one-by-one with directives like ng-blur or ng-change, or validate them all at once by passing no arguments to the validate method:

<div ng-show="user.$errors.name" class="alert alert-warning">{{user.$errors.name}}</div>

The interaction we prefer at Faculty Creative usually looks like this:

<input
    ng-model="user.name"
    ng-blur="user.validate('name')
    ng-change="user.validateIfErrored('name')>

This causes validations to run on blur, and, if errors exist on the field, to run on change, so that as soon as a user corrects an error, the error will disappear immediately.

When a model instance is saved, all validations are automatically run, so errors will appear if the form contains any errors.

You can also clear errors on a given field, or on the whole instance:

<button ng-submit="user.clearErrors()"></button>

<button ng-submit="user.clearErrors('name')"></button>

Presence:

Validates that a user has entered a value:

name: { presence: true }

Required If:

Validates that a user has entered a value if a certain requirement is met:

username: {requiredIf: { requiredIf: emailIsBlank,  message: 'You must enter a username' } }

function emailIsBlank(value, field, instance) {
    return !instance.email || instance.email.length === 0;
}

Absence:

Validates that a field does not have a value:

name: { absence: true }

Length:

Validates using ranges, min, max, or exact length:

username: { length: { in: _.range(1, 20); } },
email:    { length: { min: 5, max: 20 } },
zip:      { length: { is: 5 } }

Format:

Validates several built-in formats, and validates custom formats using the regex key:

zip:   { format: { zip: true   } },
email: { format: { email: true } },
uuid:  { format: { regex: /\d{3}\w{5}/ } } 

Numericality:

Validates that a value can be cast to a number. Can be set to ignore values like commas and hyphens:

zip:    { numericality: { ignore: /[\-]/g } }

Acceptance:

Validates truthiness, as in checkbox acceptance:

termsOfService: { acceptance: true }

Inclusion:

Validates inclusion in a set of terms:

size: { inclusion: { in: ['small', 'medium', 'large'] } }

Exclusion:

Validates exclusion from a set of terms:

size: { exclusion: { from: ['XS', 'XL'] } } 

Confirmation:

Validates that two fields match:

password:             { confirmation: true },
passwordConfirmation: { presence: true }

Validates Association:

If an association must be valid in order for an instance to be validate, use the association validation:

author: { association: 'author' },
comments: { association: 'comments' }

The MIT License (MIT)

Copyright (c) 2013-2014 Brett Shollenberger

Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:

The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.

THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.