Writing smart components with Blaze

Some of your components will need to access state outside of their data context—for instance, data from the server via subscriptions or the contents of client-side store. As discussed in the data loading and UI articles, you should be careful and considered in how you use such smart components.

All of the suggestions about reusable components apply to smart components. In addition:

Subscribe from onCreated

You should subscribe to publications from the server from an onCreated callback (within an autorun block if you have reactively changing arguments). In the Todos example app, in the Lists_show_page template we subscribe to the todos.inList publication based on the current _id FlowRouter param:

Template.Lists_show_page.onCreated(function() {
  this.getListId = () => FlowRouter.getParam('_id');

  this.autorun(() => {
    this.subscribe('todos.inList', this.getListId());
  });
});

We use this.subscribe() as opposed to Meteor.subscribe() so that the component automatically keeps track of when the subscriptions are ready. We can use this information in our HTML template with the built-in {{Template.subscriptionsReady}} helper or within helpers using instance.subscriptionsReady().

Notice that in this component we are also accessing the global client-side state store FlowRouter, which we wrap in a instance method called getListId(). This instance method is called both from the autorun in onCreated, and from the listIdArray helper:

Template.Lists_show_page.helpers({
  // We use #each on an array of one item so that the "list" template is

  // removed and a new copy is added when changing lists, which is

  // important for animation purposes.

  listIdArray() {
    const instance = Template.instance();
    const listId = instance.getListId();
    return Lists.findOne(listId) ? [listId] : [];
  },
});

Fetch in helpers

As described in the UI/UX article, you should fetch data in the same component where you subscribed to that data. In a Blaze smart component, it’s usually simplest to fetch the data in a helper, which you can then use to pass data into a reusable child component. For example, in the Lists_show_page:

{{> Lists_show_page (listArgs listId)}}

The listArgs helper fetches the data that we’ve subscribed to above:

Template.Lists_show_page.helpers({
  listArgs(listId) {
    const instance = Template.instance();
    return {
      todosReady: instance.subscriptionsReady(),
      // We pass `list` (which contains the full list, with all fields, as a function

      // because we want to control reactivity. When you check a todo item, the

      // `list.incompleteCount` changes. If we didn't do this the entire list would

      // re-render whenever you checked an item. By isolating the reactiviy on the list

      // to the area that cares about it, we stop it from happening.

      list() {
        return Lists.findOne(listId);
      },
      // By finding the list with only the `_id` field set, we don't create a dependency on the

      // `list.incompleteCount`, and avoid re-rendering the todos when it changes

      todos: Lists.findOne(listId, {fields: {_id: true}}).todos()
    };
  }
});

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Licensed under the MIT License.
http://blazejs.org/guide/smart-components.html