This project has been deprecated.
This addon is no longer actively developed. But we'll still keep it here.
After three years of use, it has become apparent that this is better used as a pattern and not extracted to its own addon. The JS community has evolved and writing logic based on promises is common practice.
You can view this twiddle for an example of how you can easily control button state based on the state of a promise. The button is disabled while saving, indicating when it is pending and tells you when it was successful or fails. All this is done without an addon. Simply save your promise to a property on your controller or component, then you can update your button:
Where activePromise is the promise you set and cannotSubmit is a boolean
you can create to disable the button.
ember-async-button is built and maintained by DockYard, contact us for expert Ember.js consulting.
When running async actions ensuring disabling of the button, re-enabling, and handling promise rejections is pretty boilerplate. This component packages up that behavior.
ember install ember-async-buttonIn a template use the async-button helper
The component can also take a block:
The closure action passed should return a promise:
import Ember from 'ember';
const { Component } = Ember;
export default Component.extend({
actions: {
save(model) {
return model.save();
}
}
});The async-button helper has other options to customize the states.
This is the action name used by the button.
The default text used for the button.
Special text used while the promise is running. If not provided will use the default value.
Deprecated! Use fulfilled
Special text used if the promise is resolved. If not provided will use the default value.
Special text used if the promise is fulfilled. If not provided will use the default value.
Special text used if the promise is rejected. If not provided will use the default value.
Boolean value that will allow for disabling the button when in a state other than pending
Flag telling the button to reset to the default state once resolved or rejected. A typical use case is to bind this attribute with ember-data isDirty flag.
A class of async-button is assigned to the button. An additional
dynamic class is assigned during one of the four states:
defaultpendingfulfilledrejected
You can adjust the button's tag by passing the tagName option:
When you set tagName to a, the element will obtain an empty href attribute. This is necessary to enable the link behavior of the element, i. e. color, underlining and hover effect.
You can of course override href if you need it for some reason:
If you don't want a href attribute on your a button, set it to false:
We are very thankful for the many contributors
This library follows Semantic Versioning
Please do! We are always looking to improve this addon. Please see our Contribution Guidelines on how to properly submit issues and pull requests.
DockYard, Inc © 2014