Skip to content

benquarmby/kontainer

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

12 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Kontainer

Kontainer is a dependency injection companion for Knockout.js. It allows view models to consume other JavaScript modules and services without being coupled to the global object. A nice side effect is that view models become more naturally testable.

The array based injection pattern (see examples below) takes inspiration from the minification-safe form of DI found in AngularJS. This is the only form supported by Kontainer.

Example Usage

// Register the Kontainer component loader with ko.
// This should be done only once during application bootstrapping.
ko.components.loaders.unshift(kontainer.loader);

// Register some singleton values with Kontainer.
kontainer.registerValue('name', 'injected value');

// Register module / service factories with their own dependencies.
kontainer.registerFactory('service', ['name', function (name) {
    var reverseName = name.split('').reverse().join('');

    return {
        reverseName: reverseName
    };
}]);

// Finally register a component with ko.
// As long as the view model is an array, Kontainer will take over resolution.
ko.components.register('some-component', {
    viewModel: ['service', function (service) {
        return {
            name: ko.observable(service.reverseName)
        };
    }],
    template: '<p data-bind="text: name"></p>'
});

To consume the params and componentInfo arguments normally passed to a view model function, inject them as named dependencies in any order:

ko.components.register('some-component', {
    viewModel: ['componentInfo', 'service', 'params', function (componentInfo, service, params) {
        return {
            // Do something with componentInfo, service and params
        };
    }],
    template: '<p data-bind="text: name"></p>'
});

Caveats

Kontainer could be described as a fully functional experiment. It works exactly as designed, but it's usefulness evaporates if Knockout.js is used with an AMD loader (highly recommended).

Knockout.js already plays extremely well with Require.js, which provides a nice level of decoupling and its own form of dependency injection. Since test-time injection libraries for Require.js already exist - such as Squire.js - adding Kontainer on top would likely just add noise to a project.

About

Kontainer - Dependency Injection for Knockout

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published