@awj has this right. I very much appreciate projects like Spine and wish it great success, but it's an alternative, not a fixed version of the same thing.
Pseudo-setters exist in Backbone for a very good reason: change events, and Collections are (IMO) more than 50% of the entire usefulness of Backbone in the first place. The point is that you have solid aggregation and analysis functions to base your model manipulations on: map, reduce, filter, find, every, some, etc etc.
Pseudo-setters exist in Backbone for a very good reason: change events, and Collections are (IMO) more than 50% of the entire usefulness of Backbone in the first place. The point is that you have solid aggregation and analysis functions to base your model manipulations on: map, reduce, filter, find, every, some, etc etc.