Zend_Dojo_Data: dojo.data Envelopes
Dojo provides data abstractions for data-enabled widgets via its
dojo.data component. This component provides the ability to attach a
data store, provide some metadata regarding the identity field and
optionally a label field, and an API for querying, sorting, and
retrieving records and sets of records from the datastore.
dojo.data is often used with XmlHttpRequest to pull dynamic data from
the server. The primary mechanism for this is to extend the
QueryReadStore to point at a URL and specify the query information. The
server side then returns data in the following JSON format:
',
',>
items: [
{ name: '...', label: '...', someKey: '...' },
...
]
}
]]>
Zend_Dojo_Data provides a simple interface for building
such structures programmatically, interacting with them, and serializing
them to an array or JSON.
Zend_Dojo_Data Usage
At its simplest, dojo.data requires that you provide the name of the
identifier field in each item, and a set of items (data). You
can either pass these in via the constructor, or via mutators:
Zend_Dojo_Data initialization via constructor
Zend_Dojo_Data initialization via mutators
setIdentifier('id')
->addItems($items);
]]>
You can also add a single item at a time, or append items, using
addItem() and addItems().
Appending data to Zend_Dojo_Data
addItem($someItem);
$data->addItems($someMoreItems);
]]>
Always use an identifier!
Every dojo.data datastore requires that the identifier column
be provided as metadata, including Zend_Dojo_Data. In fact,
if you attempt to add items without an identifier, it will raise an exception.
Individual items may be one of the following:
Associative arrays
Objects implementing a toArray() method
Any other objects (will serialize via
get_object_vars())
You can attach collections of the above items via
addItems() or setItems() (overwrites
all previously set items); when doing so, you may pass a single argument:
Arrays
Objects implementing the Traversable interface
,which includes the interfaces Iterator and
ArrayAccess.
If you want to specify a field that will act as a label for the
item, call setLabel():
Specifying a label field in Zend_Dojo_Data
setLabel('name');
]]>
Finally, you can also load a Zend_Dojo_Data item from a
dojo.data JSON array, using the
fromJson() method.
Populating Zend_Dojo_Data from JSON
fromJson($json);
]]>
Adding metadata to your containers
Some Dojo components require additional metadata along with
the dojo.data payload. As an example,
dojox.grid.Grid can pull data dynamically from a
dojox.data.QueryReadStore. For pagination to work
correctly, each return payload should contain a numRows
key with the total number of rows that could be returned by the
query. With this data, the grid knows when to continue making small
requests to the server for subsets of data and when to stop
making more requests (i.e., it has reached the last page of data).
This technique is useful for serving large sets of data in your
grids without loading the entire set at once.
Zend_Dojo_Data allows assigning metadata properties as
to the object. The following illustrates usage:
setMetadata('numRows', 100);
// Set several items at once:
$data->setMetadata(array(
'numRows' => 100,
'sort' => 'name',
));
// Inspect a single metadata value:
$numRows = $data->getMetadata('numRows');
// Inspect all metadata:
$metadata = $data->getMetadata();
// Remove a metadata item:
$data->clearMetadata('numRows');
// Remove all metadata:
$data->clearMetadata();
]]>
Advanced Use Cases
Besides acting as a serializable data container,
Zend_Dojo_Data also provides the ability to manipulate
and traverse the data in a variety of ways.
Zend_Dojo_Data implements the interfaces
ArrayAccess, Iterator, and
Countable. You can therefore use the data
collection almost as if it were an array.
All items are referenced by the identifier field. Since identifiers
must be unique, you can use the values of this field to pull
individual records. There are two ways to do this: with the
getItem() method, or via array notation.
getItem('foo');
// Or use array notation:
$item = $data['foo'];
]]>
If you know the identifier, you can use it to retrieve an item,
update it, delete it, create it, or test for it:
'Foo', 'email' => 'foo@foo.com');
// Delete an item:
unset($data['foo']);
// Test for an item:
if (isset($data[foo])) {
}
]]>
You can loop over all items as well. Internally, all items are
stored as arrays.
Or even count to see how many items you have:
Finally, as the class implements __toString(), you can
also cast it to JSON simply by echoing it or casting to string:
Available Methods
Besides the methods necessary for implementing the interfaces
listed above, the following methods are available.
setItems($items): set multiple items at once,
overwriting any items that were previously set in the
object. $items should be an array or a
Traversable object.
setItem($item, $id = null): set an individual
item, optionally passing an explicit identifier. Overwrites
the item if it is already in the collection. Valid items
include associative arrays, objects implementing
toArray(), or any object with public properties.
addItem($item, $id = null): add an individual
item, optionally passing an explicit identifier. Will raise
an exception if the item already exists in the collection.
Valid items include associative arrays, objects implementing
toArray(), or any object with public properties.
addItems($items): add multiple items at once,
appending them to any current items. Will raise an exception
if any of the new items have an identifier matching an
identifier already in the collection. $items
should be an array or a Traversable object.
getItems(): retrieve all items as an array of
arrays.
hasItem($id): determine whether an item with
the given identifier exists in the collection.
getItem($id): retrieve an item with the given
identifier from the collection; the item returned will be an associative
array. If no item matches, a NULL value is returned.
removeItem($id): remove an item with the given
identifier from the collection.
clearItems(): remove all items from the collection.
setIdentifier($identifier): set the name of the
field that represents the unique identifier for each item in
the collection.
getIdentifier(): retrieve the name of the
identifier field.
setLabel($label): set the name of a field
to be used as a display label for an item.
getLabel(): retrieve the label field name.
toArray(): cast the object to an array. At a
minimum, the array will contain the keys 'identifier',
'items', and 'label' if a label field has been set in the object.
toJson(): cast the object to a
JSON representation.