This addon adds sane document.title
integration to your ember app. It is a fork of kimroen/ember-cli-document-title, which is no longer regularly updated. If ember-cli-document-title
once again maintained, this package will be deprecated and retired.
Originally based on this gist by @machty, and since improved upon by many fabulous contributors.
Tested to work with Ember 1.13.13 and up.
Install by running
ember install ember-cli-document-title
This adds two new keys to your routes:
titleToken
title
They can be either strings or functions.
Every time you transition to a route, the following will happen:
- Ember will collect the
titleToken
s from your leafmost route and bubble them up until it hits a route that hastitle
defined.titleToken
is the name of the route's model by default. - If
title
is a string, that will be used as the document title - If
title
is a function, the collectedtitleToken
s will be passed to it in an array. - What is returned from the
title
function is used as the document title.
If you just put strings as the title
for all your routes, that will be
used as the title for it.
// routes/posts.js
export default Ember.Route.extend({
title: 'Our Favorite posts!'
});
// routes/post.js
export default Ember.Route.extend({
title: 'Please enjoy this post'
});
Let's say you want something like "Posts - My Blog", with "- My Blog" being static, and "Posts" being something you define on each route.
// routes/posts.js
export default Ember.Route.extend({
titleToken: 'Posts'
});
This will be collected and bubble up until it hits the Application Route
// routes/application.js
export default Ember.Route.extend({
title: function(tokens) {
return tokens.join(' - ') + ' - My Blog';
}
});
In this example, we want something like "Name of current post - Posts - My Blog".
Let's say we have this object as our post-model:
Ember.Object.create({
name: 'Ember is Omakase'
});
And we want to use the name of each post in the title.
// routes/post.js
export default Ember.Route.extend({
titleToken: function(model) {
return model.get('name');
}
});
This will then bubble up until it reaches our Posts Route:
// routes/posts.js
export default Ember.Route.extend({
titleToken: 'Posts'
});
And continue to the Application Route:
// routes/application.js
export default Ember.Route.extend({
title: function(tokens) {
tokens = Ember.makeArray(tokens);
tokens.unshift('My Blog');
return tokens.reverse().join(' - ');
}
});
This will result in these titles:
- On /posts - "Posts - My Blog"
- On /posts/1 - "Ember is Omakase - Posts - My Blog"
You may be in a situation where it makes sense to have one or more of your titleToken
s be asynchronous. For example if a related model is async, or you just enjoy working with Promises in your past-time.
Luckily, you can return a promise from any of your titleToken
functions, and they will all be resolved by the time your title
function receives them.
An example! Let's say we have these two Ember Data models; a post
and its user
:
// models/post.js
export default DS.Model.extend({
name: DS.attr('string'),
author: DS.belongsTo('user', { async: true })
});
// models/user.js
export default DS.Model.extend({
firstName: DS.attr('string'),
lastName: DS.attr('string')
});
In our document title, we want the name of the author in parenthesis along with the post title.
The author
relationship is async
, so getting it will return a promise. Here's
an example where we return a promise that resolves to the post name plus the author
name in parenthesis:
// routes/post.js
export default Ember.Route.extend({
titleToken: function(model) {
var postName = model.get('name');
return model.get('author').then(function(user) {
var authorName = user.get('firstName') + user.get('lastName');
return postName + '(by ' + authorName + ')';
});
}
});
With the same configuration for Posts
and Application
routes as in the previous example, this will result in this title:
- On /posts/1 - "Ember is Omakase (by John Smith) - Posts - My Blog"
It's worth noting that the page title will not update until all the promises have resolved.
Using ember-cli-document-title
with ember-cli-head
is very straight forward and allows you to use the wonderful route based declarative API for
title
and still easily add other things to the document's <head>
(i.e. meta
tags).
Only a few tweaks are needed to use both of these addons together:
- Install both addons:
ember install ember-cli-head
ember install ember-cli-document-title
- Add
headData
andsetTitle
to yourapp/router.js
:
const Router = Ember.Router.extend({
location: config.locationType,
headData: Ember.inject.service(),
setTitle(title) {
this.get('headData').set('title', title);
}
});
-
Remove
<title>
from yourapp/index.html
. -
Update
app/templates/head.hbs
(added by ember-cli-head):