I'm pretty new to this world so I need some clarifications on it. Maybe I could be wrong on the subject. So, feel free to correct me.
I'm studying how Marionette and Backbone work together. Oh yeah. Marionette gives us extension to Backbone. Really nice stuff.
The thing that is not obvious to me is when to use the routing mechanism provided by Backbone and when to use publisher/subscriber pattern by Marionette.
Is there any rule of thumb?
Here, Where to use event aggregator in backbone marionette?, a similar discussion but there is no advice on how using that or the other.
My take on the route management is explained in the free preview to my book on Marionette (http://samples.leanpub.com/marionette-gentle-introduction-sample.pdf)
Basically, my opinion (others don't necessarily share it) is that Backbone's routing should be used to configure the application state when the user "enters" the application via a URL. In other words, it will parse parameters, and call proper controller actions.
But once that initial state is setup, routing code should no longer be triggered, even as the user navigates through the application.
Here's an example:
2
argument and call theedit
controller action with thatid
parameter (which fetches that contact, displays the proper views, etc.). In other words, the initial application state is being configured.Note that this is my opinion, and other developers simply pass
trigger: true
when the user clicks a link. But as I explain in the book extract linked above, this tends to lead developers to create "stateless applications in javascript" (e.g. passing lots of parameters in the URL, even though they should be stored in the application's state). Ater all there is a reason that by default, Backbone'snavigate
method hastrigger: false
.Derick Bailey (Marionette's creator) also discussed the issue here: http://lostechies.com/derickbailey/2011/08/03/stop-using-backbone-as-if-it-were-a-stateless-web-server/
Event aggregator is more useful for notifying things. (think small bits of feedback)
Router is for things where you want the state to be save-able (think separate page in a MPA)
If you are not sure if something is an event or a page, then think about it and ask that separate question.