The last missing feature for the <Rental>
component is a map to show the location of the rental, which is what we're going to work on next:
While adding the map, you will learn about:
- Managing application-level configurations
- Parameterizing components with arguments
- Accessing component arguments
- Interpolating values in templates
- Overriding HTML attributes in
...attributes
- Refactoring with getters and auto-track
- Getting JavaScript values into the test context
Managing Application-level Configurations
We will use the Mapbox API to generate maps for our rental properties. You can sign up for free and without a credit card.
Mapbox provides a static map images API, which serves map images in PNG format. This means that we can generate the appropriate URL for the parameters we want and render the map using a standard <img>
tag. Pretty neat!
If you're curious, you can explore the options available on Mapbox by using the interactive playground.
Once you have signed up for the service, grab your default public token and paste it into config/environment.js
:
'use strict';
module.exports = function (environment) {
let ENV = {
modulePrefix: 'super-rentals',
environment,
rootURL: '/',
locationType: 'history',
EmberENV: {
RAISE_ON_DEPRECATION: true,
FEATURES: {
// Here you can enable experimental features on an ember canary build
// e.g. EMBER_NATIVE_DECORATOR_SUPPORT: true
},
},
APP: {
// Here you can pass flags/options to your application instance
// when it is created
},
};
if (environment === 'development') {
// ENV.APP.LOG_RESOLVER = true;
// ENV.APP.LOG_ACTIVE_GENERATION = true;
// ENV.APP.LOG_TRANSITIONS = true;
// ENV.APP.LOG_TRANSITIONS_INTERNAL = true;
// ENV.APP.LOG_VIEW_LOOKUPS = true;
}
if (environment === 'test') {
// Testem prefers this...
ENV.locationType = 'none';
// keep test console output quieter
ENV.APP.LOG_ACTIVE_GENERATION = false;
ENV.APP.LOG_VIEW_LOOKUPS = false;
ENV.APP.rootElement = '#ember-testing';
ENV.APP.autoboot = false;
}
if (environment === 'production') {
// here you can enable a production-specific feature
}
ENV.MAPBOX_ACCESS_TOKEN = 'paste your Mapbox access token here';
return ENV;
};
As its name implies, config/environment.js
is used to configure our app and store API keys like these. These values can be accessed from other parts of our app, and they can have different values depending on the current environment (which might be development, test, or production).
After saving the changes to our configuration file, we will need to restart our development server to pick up these file changes. Unlike the files we have edited so far, config/environment.js
is not automatically reloaded.
You can stop the server by finding the terminal window where ember server
is running, then type Ctrl + C
. That is, typing the "C" key on your keyboard while holding down the "Ctrl" key at the same time. Once it has stopped, you can start it back up again with the same ember server
command.
$ ember server
building...
Build successful (13286ms) – Serving on http://localhost:4200/
Generating a Component with a Component Class
With the Mapbox API key in place, let's generate a new component for our map.
$ ember generate component map --with-component-class
installing component
create app/components/map.js
create app/components/map.hbs
installing component-test
create tests/integration/components/map-test.js
Since not every component will necessarily have some defined behavior associated with it, the component generator does not generate a JavaScript file for us by default. As we saw earlier, we can always use the component-class
generator to add a JavaScript file for a component later on.
However, in the case of our <Map>
component, we are pretty sure that we are going to need a JavaScript file for some behavior that we have yet to define! To save a step later, we can pass the --with-component-class
flag to the component generator so that we have everything we need from the get-go.
Parameterizing Components with Arguments
Let's start with our JavaScript file:
import Component from '@glimmer/component';
import ENV from 'super-rentals/config/environment';
export default class MapComponent extends Component {}
export default class MapComponent extends Component {
get token() {
return encodeURIComponent(ENV.MAPBOX_ACCESS_TOKEN);
}
}
Here, we import the access token from the config file and return it from a token
getter. This allows us to access our token as this.token
both inside the MapComponent
class body, as well as the component's template. It is also important to URL-encode the token, just in case it contains any special characters that are not URL-safe.
Interpolating Values in Templates
Now, let's move from the JavaScript file to the template:
First, we have a container element for styling purposes.
Then we have an <img>
tag to request and render the static map image from Mapbox.
Our template contains several values that don't yet exist—@lat
, @lng
, @zoom
, @width
, and @height
. These are arguments to the <Map>
component that we will supply when invoking it.
By parameterizing our component using arguments, we made a reusable component that can be invoked from different parts of the app and customized to meet the needs for those specific contexts. We have already seen this in action when using the <LinkTo>
component earlier; we had to specify a @route
argument so that it knew what page to navigate to.
We supplied a reasonable default value for the alt
attribute based on the values of the @lat
and @lng
arguments. You may notice that we are directly interpolating values into the alt
attribute's value. Ember will automatically concatenate these interpolated values into a final string value for us, including doing any necessary HTML-escaping.
Overriding HTML Attributes in ...attributes
Next, we used ...attributes
to allow the invoker to further customize the <img>
tag, such as passing extra attributes such as class
, as well as overriding our default alt
attribute with a more specific or human-friendly one.
The ordering is important here! Ember applies the attributes in the order that they appear. By assigning the default alt
attribute first (before ...attributes
is applied), we are explicitly providing the invoker the option to provide a more tailored alt
attribute according to their use case.
Since the passed-in alt
attribute (if any exists) will appear after ours, it will override the value we specified. On the other hand, it is important that we assign src
, width
, and height
after ...attributes
, so that they don't get accidentally overwritten by the invoker.
The src
attribute interpolates all the required parameters into the URL format for Mapbox's static map image API, including the URL-escaped access token from this.token
.
Finally, since we are using the @2x
"retina" image, we should specify the width
and height
attributes. Otherwise, the <img>
will be rendered at twice the size than what we expected!
We just added a lot of behavior into a single component, so let's write some tests! In particular, we should make sure to have some test coverage for the overriding-HTML-attributes behavior we discussed above.
import { module, test } from 'qunit';
import { setupRenderingTest } from 'super-rentals/tests/helpers';
import { render } from '@ember/test-helpers';
import { render, find } from '@ember/test-helpers';
import { hbs } from 'ember-cli-htmlbars';
import ENV from 'super-rentals/config/environment';
module('Integration | Component | map', function (hooks) {
setupRenderingTest(hooks);
test('it renders', async function (assert) {
// Set any properties with this.set('myProperty', 'value');
// Handle any actions with this.set('myAction', function(val) { ... });
test('it renders a map image for the specified parameters', async function (assert) {
await render(hbs`<Map
@lat="37.7797"
@lng="-122.4184"
@zoom="10"
@width="150"
@height="120"
/>`);
await render(hbs`<Map />`);
assert
.dom('.map img')
.exists()
.hasAttribute('alt', 'Map image at coordinates 37.7797,-122.4184')
.hasAttribute('src')
.hasAttribute('width', '150')
.hasAttribute('height', '120');
assert.dom(this.element).hasText('');
let { src } = find('.map img');
let token = encodeURIComponent(ENV.MAPBOX_ACCESS_TOKEN);
// Template block usage:
await render(hbs`
<Map>
template block text
</Map>
`);
assert.ok(
src.startsWith('https://api.mapbox.com/'),
'the src starts with "https://api.mapbox.com/"'
);
assert.dom(this.element).hasText('template block text');
assert.ok(
src.includes('-122.4184,37.7797,10'),
'the src should include the lng,lat,zoom parameter'
);
assert.ok(
src.includes('150x120@2x'),
'the src should include the width,height and @2x parameter'
);
assert.ok(
src.includes(`access_token=${token}`),
'the src should include the escaped access token'
);
});
test('the default alt attribute can be overridden', async function (assert) {
await render(hbs`<Map
@lat="37.7797"
@lng="-122.4184"
@zoom="10"
@width="150"
@height="120"
alt="A map of San Francisco"
/>`);
assert.dom('.map img').hasAttribute('alt', 'A map of San Francisco');
});
test('the src, width and height attributes cannot be overridden', async function (assert) {
await render(hbs`<Map
@lat="37.7797"
@lng="-122.4184"
@zoom="10"
@width="150"
@height="120"
src="/assets/images/teaching-tomster.png"
width="200"
height="300"
/>`);
assert
.dom('.map img')
.hasAttribute('src', /^https:\/\/api\.mapbox\.com\//)
.hasAttribute('width', '150')
.hasAttribute('height', '120');
});
});
Note that the hasAttribute
test helper from qunit-dom
supports using regular expressions. We used this feature to confirm that the src
attribute starts with https://api.mapbox.com/
, as opposed to requiring it to be an exact match against a string. This allows us to be reasonably confident that the code is working correctly, without being overly-detailed in our tests.
Fingers crossed... Let's run our tests.
Hey, all the tests passed! But does that mean it actually works in practice? Let's find out by invoking the <Map>
component from the <Rental>
component's template:
Hey! That's a map!
For good measure, we will also add an assertion to the <Rental>
tests to make sure we rendered the <Map>
component successfully.
import { module, test } from 'qunit';
import { setupRenderingTest } from 'super-rentals/tests/helpers';
import { render } from '@ember/test-helpers';
import { hbs } from 'ember-cli-htmlbars';
module('Integration | Component | rental', function (hooks) {
setupRenderingTest(hooks);
test('it renders information about a rental property', async function (assert) {
await render(hbs`<Rental />`);
assert.dom('article').hasClass('rental');
assert.dom('article h3').hasText('Grand Old Mansion');
assert.dom('article .detail.owner').includesText('Veruca Salt');
assert.dom('article .detail.type').includesText('Standalone');
assert.dom('article .detail.location').includesText('San Francisco');
assert.dom('article .detail.bedrooms').includesText('15');
assert.dom('article .image').exists();
assert.dom('article .map').exists();
});
});
Refactoring with Getters and Auto-track
At this point, a big part of our <Map>
template is devoted to the <img>
tag's src
attribute, which is getting pretty long. One alternative is to move this computation into the JavaScript class instead.
From within our JavaScript class, we have access to our component's arguments using the this.args.*
API. Using that, we can move the URL logic from the template into a new getter.
import Component from '@glimmer/component';
import ENV from 'super-rentals/config/environment';
const MAPBOX_API = 'https://api.mapbox.com/styles/v1/mapbox/streets-v11/static';
export default class MapComponent extends Component {
get src() {
let { lng, lat, width, height, zoom } = this.args;
let coordinates = `${lng},${lat},${zoom}`;
let dimensions = `${width}x${height}`;
let accessToken = `access_token=${this.token}`;
return `${MAPBOX_API}/${coordinates}/${dimensions}@2x?${accessToken}`;
}
get token() {
return encodeURIComponent(ENV.MAPBOX_ACCESS_TOKEN);
}
}
Much nicer! And all of our tests still pass!
Note that we did not mark our getter as @tracked
. Unlike instance variables, getters cannot be "assigned" a new value directly, so it does not make sense for Ember to monitor them for changes.
That being said, the values produced by getters can certainly change. In our case, the value produced by our src
getter depends on the values of lat
, lng
, width
, height
and zoom
from this.args
. Whenever these dependencies get updated, we would expect {{this.src}}
from our template to be updated accordingly.
Ember does this by automatically tracking any variables that were accessed while computing a getter's value. As long as the dependencies themselves are marked as @tracked
, Ember knows exactly when to invalidate and re-render any templates that may potentially contain any "stale" and outdated getter values. This feature is also known as auto-track. All arguments that can be accessed from this.args
(in other words, this.args.*
) are implicitly marked as @tracked
by the Glimmer component superclass. Since we inherited from that superclass, everything Just Works™.
Getting JavaScript Values into the Test Context
Just to be sure, we can add a test for this behavior:
import { module, test } from 'qunit';
import { setupRenderingTest } from 'super-rentals/tests/helpers';
import { render, find } from '@ember/test-helpers';
import { hbs } from 'ember-cli-htmlbars';
import ENV from 'super-rentals/config/environment';
module('Integration | Component | map', function (hooks) {
setupRenderingTest(hooks);
test('it renders a map image for the specified parameters', async function (assert) {
await render(hbs`<Map
@lat="37.7797"
@lng="-122.4184"
@zoom="10"
@width="150"
@height="120"
/>`);
assert
.dom('.map img')
.exists()
.hasAttribute('alt', 'Map image at coordinates 37.7797,-122.4184')
.hasAttribute('src')
.hasAttribute('width', '150')
.hasAttribute('height', '120');
let { src } = find('.map img');
let token = encodeURIComponent(ENV.MAPBOX_ACCESS_TOKEN);
assert.ok(
src.startsWith('https://api.mapbox.com/'),
'the src starts with "https://api.mapbox.com/"'
);
assert.ok(
src.includes('-122.4184,37.7797,10'),
'the src should include the lng,lat,zoom parameter'
);
assert.ok(
src.includes('150x120@2x'),
'the src should include the width,height and @2x parameter'
);
assert.ok(
src.includes(`access_token=${token}`),
'the src should include the escaped access token'
);
});
test('it updates the `src` attribute when the arguments change', async function (assert) {
this.setProperties({
lat: 37.7749,
lng: -122.4194,
zoom: 10,
width: 150,
height: 120,
});
await render(hbs`<Map
@lat={{this.lat}}
@lng={{this.lng}}
@zoom={{this.zoom}}
@width={{this.width}}
@height={{this.height}}
/>`);
let img = find('.map img');
assert.ok(
img.src.includes('-122.4194,37.7749,10'),
'the src should include the lng,lat,zoom parameter'
);
assert.ok(
img.src.includes('150x120@2x'),
'the src should include the width,height and @2x parameter'
);
this.setProperties({
width: 300,
height: 200,
zoom: 12,
});
assert.ok(
img.src.includes('-122.4194,37.7749,12'),
'the src should include the lng,lat,zoom parameter'
);
assert.ok(
img.src.includes('300x200@2x'),
'the src should include the width,height and @2x parameter'
);
this.setProperties({
lat: 47.6062,
lng: -122.3321,
});
assert.ok(
img.src.includes('-122.3321,47.6062,12'),
'the src should include the lng,lat,zoom parameter'
);
assert.ok(
img.src.includes('300x200@2x'),
'the src should include the width,height and @2x parameter'
);
});
test('the default alt attribute can be overridden', async function (assert) {
await render(hbs`<Map
@lat="37.7797"
@lng="-122.4184"
@zoom="10"
@width="150"
@height="120"
alt="A map of San Francisco"
/>`);
assert.dom('.map img').hasAttribute('alt', 'A map of San Francisco');
});
test('the src, width and height attributes cannot be overridden', async function (assert) {
await render(hbs`<Map
@lat="37.7797"
@lng="-122.4184"
@zoom="10"
@width="150"
@height="120"
src="/assets/images/teaching-tomster.png"
width="200"
height="300"
/>`);
assert
.dom('.map img')
.hasAttribute('src', /^https:\/\/api\.mapbox\.com\//)
.hasAttribute('width', '150')
.hasAttribute('height', '120');
});
});
Using the special this.setProperties
testing API, we can pass arbitrary values into our component.
Note that the value of this
here does not refer to the component instance. We are not directly accessing or modifying the component's internal states (that would be extremely rude!).
Instead, this
refers to a special test context object, which we have access to inside the render
helper. This provides a "bridge" for us to pass dynamic values, in the form of arguments, into our invocation of the component. This allows us to update these values as needed from the test function.
With all our tests passing, we are ready to move on!