$parent: This is the view model object in the parent context, the one immeditely outside the current context.
$root: This is the main view model object in the root context, i.e., the topmost parent context. It’s usually the object that was passed to ko.applyBindings. It is equivalent to $parents[$parents.length - 1].
$data: This is the view model object in the current context. In the root context, $data and $root are equivalent.
You’ll only see a practical difference if you have view models nested more than one level, otherwise they will amount to the same thing.
It benefit is rather simple to demonstrate:
var Person = function(name) {
var self = this;
self.name = ko.observable(name);
self.children = ko.observableArray([]);
}
var ViewModel = function() {
var self = this;
self.name = 'root view model';
self.mainPerson = ko.observable();
}
var vm = new ViewModel(),
grandpa = new Person('grandpa'),
daddy = new Person('daddy'),
son1 = new Person('marc'),
son2 = new Person('john');
vm.mainPerson(grandpa);
grandpa.children.push(daddy);
daddy.children.push(son1);
daddy.children.push(son2);
ko.applyBindings(vm);
The key to understanding this is understanding that isMessageHidden is not a boolean value, but an observable which stores a boolean value. If we simply refer to this observable by name in our data-binding code, then knockout will infer that we want to retrieve the stored value. However, if we wish to refer to the stored value within a statement, such as !isMessageHidden(), then the parentheses are required in order to indicate that we want the stored value and not the observable itself. This tripped me up a few times when I was learning Knockout.