Migrating to 2.0

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migrating  

CanJS 2.0 introduces many new features like:

and many new API changes. But it still remains very backwards compatible with CanJS 1.1. This document covers the breaking changes in 2.0 and the deprecated 1.1 features that are currently supported, but will be removed in 2.1.

Breaking Changes

These changes require code modifications to use 2.0.

can.route.ready()

It is now necessary to always call can.route.ready once all routes have been set up. If you previously didn't use can.route.ready(), just add it on document ready like:

$(function(){
  can.route.ready()
})

can.Observe.List.Observe is now can.Observe.List.Map

Although it was an undocumented feature, you could provide a static Observe property on lists to specify what type of Observe instance should be created when items are added to the list. For example:

MyTasks = can.Observe.List({
  Observe: Task
},{})

var tasks = new MyTasks();
tasks.push({});
tasks.attr(0) instanceof Task //-> true

You should change the static Observe property to Map like:

MyTasks = can.Observe.List({
  Map: Task
},{})

In fact, this code should look like:

MyTasks = can.List.extend({
  Map: Task
})

can.EJS is no longer in core

can.EJS is no longer packaged in the core download by default. It has been replaced by can.Mustache. You can use the custom download builder to replace can.Mustache with can.EJS.

can.Observe names and locations

Plugins like can.observe.attrbibutes.js are now like can.map.attributes.js. If you are using steal or requirejs to load these, you will have to change paths. In our projects we replaced /observe/ with /map/.

Note that can/observe.js (requirejs) and can/observe/observe.js still exist. Loading these files loads can.Map, can.List and can.compute and aliases them to the old can.Observe and can.Observe.List.

Deprecated Changes

These are changes that you should strongly consider making to be able to upgrade to 2.1 and beyond:

can.Observe and can.Observe.List becomes can.Map and can.List

In order to comply with the ECMAScript 6 terminology can.Observe has been renamed to can.Map and can.Observe.List is now called can.List. Backwards compatible mappings to can.Observe and can.Observe.List are in place but are deprecated.

Use .extend for extending Constructs

Extending can.Constructs without calling .extend is deprecated. For example, instead of:

Todo = can.Construct(static, proto)
MyWidget = can.Control(static, proto)
Task = can.Model(static, proto)

do:

Todo = can.Construct.extend(static, proto)
MyWidget = can.Control.extend(static, proto)
Task = can.Model.extend(static, proto)

can.Observe.startBatch and can.Observe.stopBatch becomes can.batch.start and can.batch.end

can.Observe.startBatch and can.Observe.stopBatch are now available as can.batch.start and can.batch.stop. Backwards compatible mappings are in place.