The with binding

Overview

The with binding creates a new binding context, so that descendant elements are bound in the context of a specified object.

Of course, you can arbitrarily nest with bindings along with the other control-flow bindings such as if and foreach.

Parameters

  • Main parameter: The object that you want to use as the context for binding descendant elements.

    • If the expression you supply evaluates to null or undefined, descendant elements will not be bound at all, but will instead be removed from the document.

    • If the expression you supply involves any observable values, the expression will be re-evaluated whenever any of those observables change. Then, descendant elements will be cleared out, and a new copy of the markup will be added to your document and bound in the context of the new evaluation result.

  • Additional parameters

    • None

Examples

Example 1

Here is a very basic example of switching the binding context to a child object. Notice that in the data-bind attributes, it is not necessary to prefix latitude or longitude with coords., because the binding context is switched to coords.

<h1 data-bind="text: city"> </h1>
<p data-bind="with: coords">
  Latitude: <span data-bind="text: latitude"> </span>,
  Longitude: <span data-bind="text: longitude"> </span>
</p>

<script type="text/javascript">
  fw.applyBindings({
    city: "London",
    coords: {
      latitude:  51.5001524,
      longitude: -0.1262362
    }
  });
</script>

Example 2

This interactive example demonstrates that:

  • The with binding will dynamically add or remove descendant elements depending on whether the associated value is null/undefined or not
  • If you want to access data/functions from parent binding contexts, you can use special context properties such as $parent and $root.
<form data-bind="submit: getTweets">
  Twitter account:
  <input data-bind="value: twitterName" />
  <button type="submit">Get tweets</button>
</form>

<div data-bind="with: resultData">
  <h3>Recent tweets fetched at <span data-bind="text: retrievalDate"> </span></h3>
  <ol data-bind="foreach: topTweets">
    <li data-bind="text: text"></li>
  </ol>

  <button data-bind="click: $parent.clearResults">Clear tweets</button>
</div>
function AppViewModel() {
  var self = this;

  self.twitterName = fw.observable('@example');
  self.resultData = fw.observable(); // No initial value

  self.getTweets = function() {
    var name = self.twitterName();
    var simulatedResults = [
      { text: name + ' What a nice day.' },
      { text: name + ' Building some cool apps.' },
      { text: name + ' Just saw a famous celebrity eating lard. Yum.' }
    ];

    self.resultData({ retrievalDate: new Date(), topTweets: simulatedResults });
  }

  self.clearResults = function() {
    self.resultData(undefined);
  }
}

fw.applyBindings(new AppViewModel());

Containerless Usage

Just like other control flow elements such as if and foreach, you can use with without any container element to host it. This is useful if you need to use with in a place where it would not be legal to introduce a new container element just to hold the with binding. See the documentation for if or foreach for more details.

Example:

<ul>
  <li>Header element</li>
  <!-- ko with: outboundFlight -->
    ...
  <!-- /ko -->
  <!-- ko with: inboundFlight -->
    ...
  <!-- /ko -->
</ul>

The <!-- ko --> and <!-- /ko --> comments act as start/end markers, defining a "virtual element" that contains the markup inside. Footwork understands this virtual element syntax and binds as if you had a real container element.