/**
 * @author Ed Spencer
 *
 * Readers are used to interpret data to be loaded into a {@link Ext.data.Model Model} instance or a {@link
 * Ext.data.Store Store} - often in response to an AJAX request. In general there is usually no need to create
 * a Reader instance directly, since a Reader is almost always used together with a {@link Ext.data.proxy.Proxy Proxy},
 * and is configured using the Proxy's {@link Ext.data.proxy.Proxy#cfg-reader reader} configuration property:
 * 
 *     Ext.create('Ext.data.Store', {
 *         model: 'User',
 *         proxy: {
 *             type: 'ajax',
 *             url : 'users.json',
 *             reader: {
 *                 type: 'json',
 *                 root: 'users'
 *             }
 *         },
 *     });
 *     
 * The above reader is configured to consume a JSON string that looks something like this:
 *  
 *     {
 *         "success": true,
 *         "users": [
 *             { "name": "User 1" },
 *             { "name": "User 2" }
 *         ]
 *     }
 * 
 *
 * # Loading Nested Data
 *
 * Readers have the ability to automatically load deeply-nested data objects based on the {@link Ext.data.Association
 * associations} configured on each Model. Below is an example demonstrating the flexibility of these associations in a
 * fictional CRM system which manages a User, their Orders, OrderItems and Products. First we'll define the models:
 *
 *     Ext.define("User", {
 *         extend: 'Ext.data.Model',
 *         fields: [
 *             'id', 'name'
 *         ],
 *
 *         hasMany: {model: 'Order', name: 'orders'},
 *
 *         proxy: {
 *             type: 'rest',
 *             url : 'users.json',
 *             reader: {
 *                 type: 'json',
 *                 root: 'users'
 *             }
 *         }
 *     });
 *
 *     Ext.define("Order", {
 *         extend: 'Ext.data.Model',
 *         fields: [
 *             'id', 'total'
 *         ],
 *
 *         hasMany  : {model: 'OrderItem', name: 'orderItems', associationKey: 'order_items'},
 *         belongsTo: 'User'
 *     });
 *
 *     Ext.define("OrderItem", {
 *         extend: 'Ext.data.Model',
 *         fields: [
 *             'id', 'price', 'quantity', 'order_id', 'product_id'
 *         ],
 *
 *         belongsTo: ['Order', {model: 'Product', associationKey: 'product'}]
 *     });
 *
 *     Ext.define("Product", {
 *         extend: 'Ext.data.Model',
 *         fields: [
 *             'id', 'name'
 *         ],
 *
 *         hasMany: 'OrderItem'
 *     });
 *
 * This may be a lot to take in - basically a User has many Orders, each of which is composed of several OrderItems.
 * Finally, each OrderItem has a single Product. This allows us to consume data like this:
 *
 *     {
 *         "users": [
 *             {
 *                 "id": 123,
 *                 "name": "Ed",
 *                 "orders": [
 *                     {
 *                         "id": 50,
 *                         "total": 100,
 *                         "order_items": [
 *                             {
 *                                 "id"      : 20,
 *                                 "price"   : 40,
 *                                 "quantity": 2,
 *                                 "product" : {
 *                                     "id": 1000,
 *                                     "name": "MacBook Pro"
 *                                 }
 *                             },
 *                             {
 *                                 "id"      : 21,
 *                                 "price"   : 20,
 *                                 "quantity": 3,
 *                                 "product" : {
 *                                     "id": 1001,
 *                                     "name": "iPhone"
 *                                 }
 *                             }
 *                         ]
 *                     }
 *                 ]
 *             }
 *         ]
 *     }
 *
 * The JSON response is deeply nested - it returns all Users (in this case just 1 for simplicity's sake), all of the
 * Orders for each User (again just 1 in this case), all of the OrderItems for each Order (2 order items in this case),
 * and finally the Product associated with each OrderItem. Now we can read the data and use it as follows:
 *
 *     var store = Ext.create('Ext.data.Store', {
 *         model: "User"
 *     });
 *
 *     store.load({
 *         callback: function() {
 *             //the user that was loaded
 *             var user = store.first();
 *
 *             console.log("Orders for " + user.get('name') + ":")
 *
 *             //iterate over the Orders for each User
 *             user.orders().each(function(order) {
 *                 console.log("Order ID: " + order.getId() + ", which contains items:");
 *
 *                 //iterate over the OrderItems for each Order
 *                 order.orderItems().each(function(orderItem) {
 *                     //we know that the Product data is already loaded, so we can use the synchronous getProduct
 *                     //usually, we would use the asynchronous version (see {@link Ext.data.BelongsToAssociation})
 *                     var product = orderItem.getProduct();
 *
 *                     console.log(orderItem.get('quantity') + ' orders of ' + product.get('name'));
 *                 });
 *             });
 *         }
 *     });
 *
 * Running the code above results in the following:
 *
 *     Orders for Ed:
 *     Order ID: 50, which contains items:
 *     2 orders of MacBook Pro
 *     3 orders of iPhone
 */
Ext.define('Ext.data.reader.Reader', {
    requires: ['Ext.data.ResultSet'],
    alternateClassName: ['Ext.data.Reader', 'Ext.data.DataReader'],
    
    /**
     * @cfg {String} idProperty
     * Name of the property within a row object that contains a record identifier value. Defaults to The id of the
     * model. If an idProperty is explicitly specified it will override that of the one specified on the model
     */

    /**
     * @cfg {String} totalProperty
     * Name of the property from which to retrieve the total number of records in the dataset. This is only needed if
     * the whole dataset is not passed in one go, but is being paged from the remote server. Defaults to total.
     */
    totalProperty: 'total',

    /**
     * @cfg {String} successProperty
     * Name of the property from which to retrieve the success attribute. Defaults to success. See
     * {@link Ext.data.proxy.Server}.{@link Ext.data.proxy.Server#exception exception} for additional information.
     */
    successProperty: 'success',

    /**
     * @cfg {String} root
     * The name of the property which contains the Array of row objects.  For JSON reader it's dot-separated list
     * of property names.  For XML reader it's a CSS selector.  For array reader it's not applicable.
     * 
     * By default the natural root of the data will be used.  The root Json array, the root XML element, or the array.
     *
     * The data packet value for this property should be an empty array to clear the data or show no data.
     */
    root: '',
    
    /**
     * @cfg {String} messageProperty
     * The name of the property which contains a response message. This property is optional.
     */
    
    /**
     * @cfg {Boolean} implicitIncludes
     * True to automatically parse models nested within other models in a response object. See the
     * Ext.data.reader.Reader intro docs for full explanation. Defaults to true.
     */
    implicitIncludes: true,
    
    isReader: true,
    
    /**
     * Creates new Reader.
     * @param {Object} config (optional) Config object.
     */
    constructor: function(config) {
        var me = this;
        
        Ext.apply(me, config || {});
        me.fieldCount = 0;
        me.model = Ext.ModelManager.getModel(config.model);
        if (me.model) {
            me.buildExtractors();
        }
    },

    /**
     * Sets a new model for the reader.
     * @private
     * @param {Object} model The model to set.
     * @param {Boolean} setOnProxy True to also set on the Proxy, if one is configured
     */
    setModel: function(model, setOnProxy) {
        var me = this;
        
        me.model = Ext.ModelManager.getModel(model);
        me.buildExtractors(true);
        
        if (setOnProxy && me.proxy) {
            me.proxy.setModel(me.model, true);
        }
    },

    /**
     * Reads the given response object. This method normalizes the different types of response object that may be passed
     * to it, before handing off the reading of records to the {@link #readRecords} function.
     * @param {Object} response The response object. This may be either an XMLHttpRequest object or a plain JS object
     * @return {Ext.data.ResultSet} The parsed ResultSet object
     */
    read: function(response) {
        var data = response;
        
        if (response && response.responseText) {
            data = this.getResponseData(response);
        }
        
        if (data) {
            return this.readRecords(data);
        } else {
            return this.nullResultSet;
        }
    },

    /**
     * Abstracts common functionality used by all Reader subclasses. Each subclass is expected to call this function
     * before running its own logic and returning the Ext.data.ResultSet instance. For most Readers additional
     * processing should not be needed.
     * @param {Object} data The raw data object
     * @return {Ext.data.ResultSet} A ResultSet object
     */
    readRecords: function(data) {
        var me  = this;
        
        /*
         * We check here whether the number of fields has changed since the last read.
         * This works around an issue when a Model is used for both a Tree and another
         * source, because the tree decorates the model with extra fields and it causes
         * issues because the readers aren't notified.
         */
        if (me.fieldCount !== me.getFields().length) {
            me.buildExtractors(true);
        }
        
        /**
         * @property {Object} rawData
         * The raw data object that was last passed to readRecords. Stored for further processing if needed
         */
        me.rawData = data;

        data = me.getData(data);

        // If we pass an array as the data, we dont use getRoot on the data.
        // Instead the root equals to the data.
        var root    = Ext.isArray(data) ? data : me.getRoot(data),
            success = true,
            recordCount = 0,
            total, value, records, message;
            
        if (root) {
            total = root.length;
        }

        if (me.totalProperty) {
            value = parseInt(me.getTotal(data), 10);
            if (!isNaN(value)) {
                total = value;
            }
        }

        if (me.successProperty) {
            value = me.getSuccess(data);
            if (value === false || value === 'false') {
                success = false;
            }
        }
        
        if (me.messageProperty) {
            message = me.getMessage(data);
        }
        
        if (root) {
            records = me.extractData(root);
            recordCount = records.length;
        } else {
            recordCount = 0;
            records = [];
        }

        return Ext.create('Ext.data.ResultSet', {
            total  : total || recordCount,
            count  : recordCount,
            records: records,
            success: success,
            message: message
        });
    },

    /**
     * Returns extracted, type-cast rows of data.  Iterates to call #extractValues for each row
     * @param {Object[]/Object} root from server response
     * @private
     */
    extractData : function(root) {
        var me = this,
            values  = [],
            records = [],
            Model   = me.model,
            i       = 0,
            length  = root.length,
            idProp  = me.getIdProperty(),
            node, id, record;
            
        if (!root.length && Ext.isObject(root)) {
            root = [root];
            length = 1;
        }

        for (; i < length; i++) {
            node   = root[i];
            values = me.extractValues(node);
            id     = me.getId(node);

            
            record = new Model(values, id, node);
            records.push(record);
                
            if (me.implicitIncludes) {
                me.readAssociated(record, node);
            }
        }

        return records;
    },
    
    /**
     * @private
     * Loads a record's associations from the data object. This prepopulates hasMany and belongsTo associations
     * on the record provided.
     * @param {Ext.data.Model} record The record to load associations for
     * @param {Object} data The data object
     * @return {String} Return value description
     */
    readAssociated: function(record, data) {
        var associations = record.associations.items,
            i            = 0,
            length       = associations.length,
            association, associationData, proxy, reader;
        
        for (; i < length; i++) {
            association     = associations[i];
            associationData = this.getAssociatedDataRoot(data, association.associationKey || association.name);
            
            if (associationData) {
                reader = association.getReader();
                if (!reader) {
                    proxy = association.associatedModel.proxy;
                    // if the associated model has a Reader already, use that, otherwise attempt to create a sensible one
                    if (proxy) {
                        reader = proxy.getReader();
                    } else {
                        reader = new this.constructor({
                            model: association.associatedName
                        });
                    }
                }
                association.read(record, reader, associationData);
            }  
        }
    },
    
    /**
     * @private
     * Used internally by {@link #readAssociated}. Given a data object (which could be json, xml etc) for a specific
     * record, this should return the relevant part of that data for the given association name. This is only really
     * needed to support the XML Reader, which has to do a query to get the associated data object
     * @param {Object} data The raw data object
     * @param {String} associationName The name of the association to get data for (uses associationKey if present)
     * @return {Object} The root
     */
    getAssociatedDataRoot: function(data, associationName) {
        return data[associationName];
    },
    
    getFields: function() {
        return this.model.prototype.fields.items;
    },

    /**
     * @private
     * Given an object representing a single model instance's data, iterates over the model's fields and
     * builds an object with the value for each field.
     * @param {Object} data The data object to convert
     * @return {Object} Data object suitable for use with a model constructor
     */
    extractValues: function(data) {
        var fields = this.getFields(),
            i      = 0,
            length = fields.length,
            output = {},
            field, value;

        for (; i < length; i++) {
            field = fields[i];
            value = this.extractorFunctions[i](data);

            output[field.name] = value;
        }

        return output;
    },

    /**
     * @private
     * By default this function just returns what is passed to it. It can be overridden in a subclass
     * to return something else. See XmlReader for an example.
     * @param {Object} data The data object
     * @return {Object} The normalized data object
     */
    getData: function(data) {
        return data;
    },

    /**
     * @private
     * This will usually need to be implemented in a subclass. Given a generic data object (the type depends on the type
     * of data we are reading), this function should return the object as configured by the Reader's 'root' meta data config.
     * See XmlReader's getRoot implementation for an example. By default the same data object will simply be returned.
     * @param {Object} data The data object
     * @return {Object} The same data object
     */
    getRoot: function(data) {
        return data;
    },

    /**
     * Takes a raw response object (as passed to this.read) and returns the useful data segment of it. This must be
     * implemented by each subclass
     * @param {Object} response The responce object
     * @return {Object} The useful data from the response
     */
    getResponseData: function(response) {
        //<debug>
        Ext.Error.raise("getResponseData must be implemented in the Ext.data.reader.Reader subclass");
        //</debug>
    },

    /**
     * @private
     * Reconfigures the meta data tied to this Reader
     */
    onMetaChange : function(meta) {
        var fields = meta.fields,
            newModel;
        
        Ext.apply(this, meta);
        
        if (fields) {
            newModel = Ext.define("Ext.data.reader.Json-Model" + Ext.id(), {
                extend: 'Ext.data.Model',
                fields: fields
            });
            this.setModel(newModel, true);
        } else {
            this.buildExtractors(true);
        }
    },
    
    /**
     * Get the idProperty to use for extracting data
     * @private
     * @return {String} The id property
     */
    getIdProperty: function(){
        var prop = this.idProperty;
        if (Ext.isEmpty(prop)) {
            prop = this.model.prototype.idProperty;
        }
        return prop;
    },

    /**
     * @private
     * This builds optimized functions for retrieving record data and meta data from an object.
     * Subclasses may need to implement their own getRoot function.
     * @param {Boolean} [force=false] True to automatically remove existing extractor functions first
     */
    buildExtractors: function(force) {
        var me          = this,
            idProp      = me.getIdProperty(),
            totalProp   = me.totalProperty,
            successProp = me.successProperty,
            messageProp = me.messageProperty,
            accessor;
            
        if (force === true) {
            delete me.extractorFunctions;
        }
        
        if (me.extractorFunctions) {
            return;
        }   

        //build the extractors for all the meta data
        if (totalProp) {
            me.getTotal = me.createAccessor(totalProp);
        }

        if (successProp) {
            me.getSuccess = me.createAccessor(successProp);
        }

        if (messageProp) {
            me.getMessage = me.createAccessor(messageProp);
        }

        if (idProp) {
            accessor = me.createAccessor(idProp);

            me.getId = function(record) {
                var id = accessor.call(me, record);
                return (id === undefined || id === '') ? null : id;
            };
        } else {
            me.getId = function() {
                return null;
            };
        }
        me.buildFieldExtractors();
    },

    /**
     * @private
     */
    buildFieldExtractors: function() {
        //now build the extractors for all the fields
        var me = this,
            fields = me.getFields(),
            ln = fields.length,
            i  = 0,
            extractorFunctions = [],
            field, map;

        for (; i < ln; i++) {
            field = fields[i];
            map   = (field.mapping !== undefined && field.mapping !== null) ? field.mapping : field.name;

            extractorFunctions.push(me.createAccessor(map));
        }
        me.fieldCount = ln;

        me.extractorFunctions = extractorFunctions;
    }
}, function() {
    Ext.apply(this, {
        // Private. Empty ResultSet to return when response is falsy (null|undefined|empty string)
        nullResultSet: Ext.create('Ext.data.ResultSet', {
            total  : 0,
            count  : 0,
            records: [],
            success: true
        })
    });
});