Backbone.Syphon - serialize the forms in your Backbone.Views into a JSON object for use with Backbone's models.
Working with form elements in a Backbone view can become very tedious very quickly. You will either end up writing a lot of repetitive code to read values from the form, or end up using a key-value-observer or data-binding solution that automatically populates your model for you. While these are valid options and I highly recommend understanding how they work, there are times when these options are not the best choice for your application.
Backbone.Syphon aims to make it easy to serialize the form inputs of a Backbone.View in to a simple JSON object that contains all of the values from the form.
You can download the raw source code from the "src" folder above, or grab one of the builds from the "lib" folder.
To get the latest stable release, use these links which point to the 'master' branch's builds:
Development: backbone.syphon.js
Production: backbone.syphon.min.js
Development: backbone.syphon.js
Production: backbone.syphon.min.js
This readme file contains basic usage examples.
If you need to modify the behaviors of Syphon, see the API document. It contains the documentation for the core APIs that Syphon exposes, with examples on how to change the behaviors of Syphon.
Syphon has annotated source code using the Docco tool to turn comments in to documentation. This provides an in-depth look at what each section of is doing.
When the data from a form is needed, you can call the
serialize
method of Backbone.Syphon
to retrieve an
object literal that contains the data from your view's
form.
Backbone.View.extend({
events: {
"submit form": "formSubmitted"
},
formSubmitted: function(e){
e.preventDefault();
var data = Backbone.Syphon.serialize(this);
this.model.set(data);
this.model.save();
},
render: function(){
// build the view's form, here
}
});
The default behavior for serializing fields is to use the field's "name" attribute as the key in the serialized object.
<form>
<input name="a">
<select name="b"></select>
<textarea name="c"></textarea>
</form>
Backbone.Syphon.serialize(view);
// will produce =>
{
a: "",
b: "",
c: ""
}
For information on how to change this behavior, see the Key Extractors section of the API Documentation.
The default behavior for serializing fields is to use jQuery's .val()
to get the value of the input element.
<form>
<input name="a" value="a-value">
<textarea name="b">b-value</textarea>
</form>
Backbone.Syphon.serialize(view);
// will produce =>
{
a: "a-value",
b: "b-value",
}
For information on how to change this behavior, see the Input Readers section of the API Documentation.
By default, a checkbox will return a boolean value signifying whether or not it is checked.
<form>
<input type="checkbox" name="a">
<input type="checkbox" name="b" checked>
</form>
Backbone.Syphon.serialize(view);
// will produce =>
{
a: false,
b: true
}
For information on how to change this behavior, see the Input Readers section of the API Documentation.
Radio button groups (grouped by the input element "name" attribute) will produce a single value, from the selected radio button.
<form>
<input type="radio" name="a" value="1">
<input type="radio" name="a" value="2" checked>
<input type="radio" name="a" value="3">
<input type="radio" name="a" value="4">
</form>
Backbone.Syphon.serialize(view);
// will produce =>
{
a: "2"
}
This behavior can be changed by registering a different set of Key Extractors, Input Readers, and Key Assignment Validators. See the full API Documentation. for more information on these.
Syphon also allows you to deserialize an object's values back on to a form. It uses the same conventions and configuration as the serialization process, with the introduction of Input Writers to handle populating the form fields with the values. See the full API Documentation. for more information on Input Writers.
<form>
<input type="text" name="a">
<input type="text" name="b">
</form>
var data = {
a: "foo",
b: "bar"
};
Backbone.Syphon.deserialize(this, data);
This will populate the form input elements with the correct values from
the data
parameter.
The following types of input are ignored, and not included in the resulting JavaScript object:
<inputtype="submit">
buttons<input type="reset"
> buttons- standard
<button>
tags
If you need to get a value from the specific button that was clicked, you can either include it specifically (see below) or use a DOM event to listen for that element being manipulated (clicked, for example) and manually grab the data you need.
Syphon exposes the list of ignored input types as a raw array. You can push, pop, and manipulate this array as any other array, to specify which types of input fields you want to ignore.
This list is global to Syphon and there is no way to customize it for
a specific call to serialize
.
// ignore all <textarea> input elements
Backbone.Syphon.ignoredTypes.push("textarea");
You can include or exclude specific fields as needed. Inclusion is given priority and specifying fields to include will force Syphon to exclude all other fields. Including a field that is ignore by it's type will also force the field to be included.
Given this HTML:
<form>
<input name="a" value="a-value">
<input name="b" value="b-value">
<input name="c" value="c-value">
<button name="d" value="d-value">
</form>
The following will occur:
// include a, b only
Backbone.Syphon.serialize(view, {
include: ["a", "b"]
});
// will produce =>
{
a: "a-value",
b: "b-value"
}
// include the normally excluded (button) "d"
Backbone.Syphon.serialize(view, {
include: ["a", "d"]
});
// will produce =>
{
a: "a-value",
d: "d-value"
}
// exclude a
Backbone.Syphon.serialize(view, {
exclude: ["a"]
});
// will produce =>
{
b: "b-value",
c: "c-value"
}
// include a and b, exclude b and c
Backbone.Syphon.serialize(view, {
include: ["a", "b"],
exclude: ["b", "c"]
});
// will produce =>
{
a: "a-value",
b: "b-value"
}
The include / exclude process uses the registered Key Extractors to determine which fields to include / exclude.
This means if you are only using the default Key Extractor which uses the "name" attribute, all fields will be included or excluded based on the name of the field.
If you have registered other Key Extractors, they will be used when determining which fields to include / exclude.
<form>
<input id="a">
<input type="radio" name="b">
<input id="c">
<input type="radio" name="d">
</form>
// By default, use the "id"
Backbone.Syphon.KeyExtractors.registerDefault(function($el){
return $el.prop("id");
});
// For radio buttons, use the "name"
Backbone.Syphon.KeyExtractors.register("radio", function($el){
return $el.prop("name");
});
// Serialize the form
Backbone.Syphon.serialize(view, {
exclude: ["a", "b"]
});
// This will produce =>
{
c: "",
d: ""
}
For more information on Key Extractors, see the full API Documentation.
There are a few other options that can be specified when calling the
Syphon.serialize
method, which allow the behavior of Syphon to be
altered for a single call instead of for all calls.
Key extractors are used to generate the "key" in the {key: "value"}
result. You can specify a KeyExtractorSet
as part of the options:
extractors = new Backbone.Syphon.KeyExtractorSet();
// configure it ...
Backbone.Syphone.serialize({
keyExtractors: extractors
});
For more information on Key Extractors, see the full API Documentation.
Input Readers are used to generate the "value" in the {key: "value"}
result. You can specify a InputReadetSet
as part of the options:
readers = new Backbone.Syphon.InputReaderSet();
// configure it ...
Backbone.Syphone.serialize({
inputReaders: readers
});
For more information on Input Readers, see the full API Documentation.
Input Writers are used to set the value of form elements to the
"value" in the {key: "value"}
data / object. At this time, you cannot
specify input writers in the deserialize
method. That will come
soon, hopefully.
For more information on Input Writers, see the full API Documentation.
Input Readers are used to validate the assignment of a key to a value,
in the context of an element. You can specify a InputReadetSet
as part
of the options:
validators = new Backbone.Syphon.KeyAssignmentValidators();
// configure it ...
Backbone.Syphone.serialize({
keyAssignmentValidators: validators
});
For more information on Key Assignment Validators, see the full API Documentation.
There some known limitations in Backbone.Syphon, partially by design and partially implemented as default behaivors.
- You must have a
<form>
within your view's$el
- An input of type
checkbox
will return a boolean value. This can be overriden by replacing the Input Reader for checkboxes.
If you wish to build Backbone.Syphon on your system, you will need Ruby to run the Jasmine specs, and NodeJS to run the grunt build.
-
Be sure you have Bundler installed in your Ruby Gems. Then run
bundle install
from the project folder -
Once this is done, you can run
rake jasmine
to run the Jasmine server -
Point your browser at
http://localhost:8888
and you will see all of the specs for Backbone.Syphon
-
Be sure you have NodeJS and NPM installed on your system
-
Run
npm install -g grunt
to install the grunt build system -
From the project folder, run
grunt
to produce a build
I've recorded several screencasts on how I built Syphon.
- WatchMeCode: Episode 7: covers the initial project setup, build and release
- WatchMeCode: Episode 8: covers setting up an AMD build along side the standard build
- Added Input Writers, to deserialize an object back in to a form
- The view's
el
can be aform
element directly
- Specify fields to include or exclude, when calling
.serialize
- Defaults to input element "name" for the key in the serialized object
- Added Key Extractors and Key Extractor Sets, allowing configuration of how the "key" in
{key: "value"}
serialized objects are generated - Added Key Assignment Validators and Key Assignment Validator sets, allowing you to validate a key / value pair and prevent it from being attached to the serialization result
- Input Readers are now a type that can be instantiated and replaced, wholesale, instead of just registered / removed
- Created Syphon.TypeRegistry base type which is used by Key Extractors, Input Readders and Key Assignment Validators
- Exposed the
Syphon.ignoredTypes
array, to allow manipulating which input types are ignored - Allow
keyExtractors
,inputReaders
andkeyAssignmentValidators
to be specified as part of the options for the call toserialize
- Ability to register Input Readers for elements other than
<input>
- An
<input>
element with notype
attribute will be treated as atext
input - Ignore elements of type "submit", "button" and "reset"
- Initial release
- Serialize a
<form>
tag and it's input elements in to a simple JavaScript object - Converts a checkbox in to a boolean value
Copyright (c) 2012 Derick Bailey, Muted Solutions, LLC
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.
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