One common reason to use a front-end framework is its interactivity - your application can provide functionality to the user without needing to hit your back-end. Often, you will want what the user sees to be updated in real time, or some other kind of value binding (linking property A to property B so that if A is changed, B gets updated too). Ember provides a way to implement value binding in applications through a construction called an Ember Object.
By the end of this, developers should be able to:
- Read values from Ember Object using
.get()
- Write values to Ember Object using
.set()
- Explain the benefit of using Ember computed properties
- Create Ember computed properties
- Fork and clone this repository.
- Change into the new directory.
- Create and checkout a new branch, named
response
. - Follow the directions given in
study.md
. - When finished, push to your fork and submit a pull request.
- All content is licensed under a CCBYNCSA 4.0 license.
- All software code is licensed under GNU GPLv3. For commercial use or alternative licensing, please contact [email protected].