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Session
Session
provides a global object on the client that you can use to store an arbitrary set of key-value pairs. Use it to store things like the currently selected item in a list.
What’s special about Session
is that it’s reactive. If you call Session.get
("currentList")
from inside a template, the template will automatically be rerendered whenever Session.set
("currentList", x)
is called.
To add Session
to your application, run this command in your terminal:
meteor add session
Client
Session.set(key, value)
import { Session } from 'meteor/session'
(session/session.js, line 6)
import { Session } from 'meteor/session'
(session/session.js, line 6)
Set a variable in the session. Notify any listeners that the value has changed (eg: redraw templates, and rerun any Tracker.autorun
computations, that called Session.get
on this key
.)
Arguments
key
String-
The key to set, eg,
selectedItem
value
EJSON-able Object or undefined-
The new value for
key
Example:
Tracker.autorun(function () {
Meteor.subscribe("chat-history", {room: Session.get("currentRoomId")});
});
// Causes the function passed to Tracker.autorun to be re-run, so
// that the chat-history subscription is moved to the room "home".
Session.set("currentRoomId", "home");
Session.set
can also be called with an object of keys and values, which is equivalent to calling Session.set
individually on each key/value pair.
Session.set({
a: "foo",
b: "bar"
});
Client
Session.setDefault(key, value)
import { Session } from 'meteor/session'
(session/session.js, line 18)
import { Session } from 'meteor/session'
(session/session.js, line 18)
Set a variable in the session if it hasn't been set before. Otherwise works exactly the same as Session.set
.
Arguments
key
String-
The key to set, eg,
selectedItem
value
EJSON-able Object or undefined-
The new value for
key
This is useful in initialization code, to avoid re-initializing a session variable every time a new version of your app is loaded.
Client
Session.get(key)
import { Session } from 'meteor/session'
(session/session.js, line 28)
import { Session } from 'meteor/session'
(session/session.js, line 28)
Get the value of a session variable. If inside a reactive computation, invalidate the computation the next time the value of the variable is changed by Session.set
. This returns a clone of the session value, so if it's an object or an array, mutating the returned value has no effect on the value stored in the session.
Arguments
key
String-
The name of the session variable to return
Example:
<!-- in main.html -->
<template name="main">
<p>We've always been at war with {{theEnemy}}.</p>
</template>
// in main.js
Template.main.helpers({
theEnemy: function () {
return Session.get("enemy");
}
});
Session.set("enemy", "Eastasia");
// Page will say "We've always been at war with Eastasia"
Session.set("enemy", "Eurasia");
// Page will change to say "We've always been at war with Eurasia"
Client
Session.equals(key, value)
import { Session } from 'meteor/session'
(session/session.js, line 41)
import { Session } from 'meteor/session'
(session/session.js, line 41)
Test if a session variable is equal to a value. If inside a reactive computation, invalidate the computation the next time the variable changes to or from the value.
Arguments
key
String-
The name of the session variable to test
value
String, Number, Boolean, null, or undefined-
The value to test against
If value is a scalar, then these two expressions do the same thing:
(1) Session.get("key") === value
(2) Session.equals("key", value)
… but the second one is always better. It triggers fewer invalidations (template redraws), making your program more efficient.
Example:
<template name="postsView">
{{! Show a dynamically updating list of items. Let the user click on an
item to select it. The selected item is given a CSS class so it
can be rendered differently. }}
{{#each posts}}
{{> postItem }}
{{/each}}
</template>
<template name="postItem">
<div class="{{postClass}}">{{title}}</div>
</template>
// in JS file
Template.postsView.helpers({
posts: function() {
return Posts.find();
}
});
Template.postItem.helpers({
postClass: function() {
return Session.equals("selectedPost", this._id) ?
"selected" : "";
}
});
Template.postItem.events({
'click': function() {
Session.set("selectedPost", this._id);
}
});
Using Session.equals here means that when the user clicks on an item and changes the selection, only the newly selected and the newly unselected items are re-rendered.
If Session.get had been used instead of Session.equals, then when the selection changed, all the items would be re-rendered.
For object and array session values, you cannot use Session.equals
; instead, you need to use the underscore
package and write _.isEqual(Session.get(key), value)
.
© 2011–2017 Meteor Development Group, Inc.
Licensed under the MIT License.
https://docs.meteor.com/v1.3.5/api/session.html