I have a Backbone app. I\'m using Backbone.history to enable use of the back button. We have a page (settings) that auto loads a popup requiring input from the user. If the u
I used the same answer from jevakallio, but I had the same problem that commenter Jay Kumar had: The routesHit
doesn't subtract so hitting appRouter.back()
enough times will take the user out of the app, so I added 3 lines:
var AppRouter = Backbone.Router.extend({
initialize: function() {
this.routesHit = 0;
//keep count of number of routes handled by your application
Backbone.history.on('route', function() { this.routesHit++; }, this);
},
back: function() {
if(this.routesHit > 1) {
//more than one route hit -> user did not land to current page directly
this.routesHit = this.routesHit - 2; //Added line: read below
window.history.back();
} else {
//otherwise go to the home page. Use replaceState if available so
//the navigation doesn't create an extra history entry
if(Backbone.history.getFragment() != 'app/') //Added line: read below
this.routesHit = 0; //Added line: read below
this.navigate('app/', {trigger:true, replace:true});
}
}
});
And use the router method to navigate back:
appRouter.back();
Added lines:
1st one: Subtract 2 from routesHit
, then when its redirected to the "back" page it'll gain 1 so it's actually like you did just a minus 1.
2nd one: if user is already at "home", there wont be a redirect so don't do anything to routesHit
.
3rd one: If user is where he started and is being sent back to "home", set routesHit = 0
, then when redirected to "home" routesHit
will be 1 again.