We have a single Backbone view comprised of a sidebar and several sub-views. For simplicity, we've decided to have the sidebar and sub-views governed by a single render
function. However, the click .edit
event seems to be firing multiple times after clicking on one of the sidebar items. For example, if I start out on "general" and click .edit
, then hello
fires once. If I then click .profile
on the sidebar and click .edit
again, hello
fires twice. Any ideas?
View
events: {
"click .general": "general",
"click .profile": "profile",
"click .edit": "hello",
},
general: function() {
app.router.navigate("/account/general", {trigger: true});
},
profile: function() {
app.router.navigate("/account/profile", {trigger: true});
},
render: function(section) {
$(this.el).html(getHTML("#account-template", {}));
this.$("#sidebar").html(getHTML("#account-sidebar-template", {}));
this.$("#sidebar div").removeClass("active");
switch (this.options.section) {
case "profile":
this.$("#sidebar .profile").addClass("active");
this.$("#content").html(getHTML("#account-profile-template"));
break;
default:
this.$("#sidebar .general").addClass("active");
this.$("#content").html(getHTML("#account-general-template"));
}
},
hello: function() {
console.log("Hello world.");
},
Router
account: function(section) {
if (section) {
var section = section.toLowerCase();
}
app.view = new AccountView({model: app.user, section: section});
},
Solution
My solution was to change the router to this:
account: function(section) {
if (section) {
var section = section.toLowerCase();
}
if (app.view) {
app.view.undelegateEvents();
}
app.view = new AccountView({model: app.user, section: section});
},
This works for now, but will this create a memory leak?