Repositories
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This page is a work in progress and may undergo further revisions, updates, or amendments. The information contained herein is subject to change without notice.
A repository serves as the Backoffices entry point for requesting data and getting notified about updates. Each domain should register its own repository in the Backoffice.
Repositories can use different data sources depending on the state of the application. The data sources can come from places like a server, an offline database, a store, or a Signal-R connection. That means that the consumer will not have to be concerned how to access the data, add or remove items from a collection, etc. This means we get a loose connection between the consumer and the data-storing procedures, hiding all complex implementation.
A repository must be instantiated in the context where it is used. It should take a host element as part of the constructor. This ensures that any contexts consumed in the repository, like notifications or modals, are rendered in the correct DOM context.
A repository can be called directly from an element, but will often be instantiated in a context, like the Workspace Context.