/**
* @author Ed Spencer
* @class Ext.data.reader.Array
* @extends Ext.data.reader.Json
*
* <p>Data reader class to create an Array of {@link Ext.data.Model} objects from an Array.
* Each element of that Array represents a row of data fields. The
* fields are pulled into a Record object using as a subscript, the <code>mapping</code> property
* of the field definition if it exists, or the field's ordinal position in the definition.</p>
*
* <p><u>Example code:</u></p>
*
<pre><code>
Employee = Ext.define('Employee', {
extend: 'Ext.data.Model',
fields: [
'id',
{name: 'name', mapping: 1}, // "mapping" only needed if an "id" field is present which
{name: 'occupation', mapping: 2} // precludes using the ordinal position as the index.
]
});
var myReader = new Ext.data.reader.Array({
model: 'Employee'
}, Employee);
</code></pre>
*
* <p>This would consume an Array like this:</p>
*
<pre><code>
[ [1, 'Bill', 'Gardener'], [2, 'Ben', 'Horticulturalist'] ]
</code></pre>
*
* @constructor
* Create a new ArrayReader
* @param {Object} meta Metadata configuration options.
*/
Ext.define('Ext.data.reader.Array', {
extend: 'Ext.data.reader.Json',
alternateClassName: 'Ext.data.ArrayReader',
alias : 'reader.array',
* @private
* Most of the work is done for us by JsonReader, but we need to overwrite the field accessors to just
* reference the correct position in the array.
*/
buildExtractors: function() {
this.callParent(arguments);
var fields = this.model.prototype.fields.items,
length = fields.length,
extractorFunctions = [],
i;
for (i = 0; i < length; i++) {
extractorFunctions.push(function(index) {
return function(data) {
return data[index];
};
}(fields[i].mapping || i));
}
this.extractorFunctions = extractorFunctions;
}
});