I am trying to have two components, <app-map> and <app-markers-list>.
<app-map> loads Google Maps API and displays a map on the page. It emits a mapLoaded event in ngAfterViewInit()
#Output() mapLoaded: EventEmitter<boolean> = new EventEmitter();
<app-markers-list> loads a list of markers via Angular's HttpClient. It emits a markersLoaded event at the end of HttpClient.get().subscribe() Observable.
#Output() markersLoaded: EventEmitter<boolean> = new EventEmitter();
How do I catch these two events at once so I can call another component's function that will populate the map with the markers?
I think there is a simple solution.
#Output()
allLoaded = new EventEmitter();
oneLoaded = false;
ngAfterViewInit() {
this.emitAllLoaded();
}
yourFunctionWhereHttpClientGetLocated() {
this.http.get(..).subscribe(() => {
this.emitAllLoaded();
});
}
emitAllLoaded() {
if (oneLoaded) this.allLoaded.emit();
oneLoaded = true;
}
You might don't need to use Observable or Subject
I am assuming you are trying to capture events from <app-map> and <app-markers-list> in a parent component.
You can capture as we generally do, put binding in parent template as below:
<app-map (mapLoaded)="mapLoaded($event)"></app-map>
<app-markers-list (markersLoaded)="markersLoaded($event)"></app-markers-list>
Now you can manage these events in parent component. You can use subjects or observables and observable operators (combineLatest, of). Please find the code below how you can use it.
import { combineLatest, of } from 'rxjs';
// this will be your parent component.
export class ParentComponent {
mapLoaded = new Subject()
mapLoaded$ = this.mapLoaded.asObservable();
markerListLoaded = new Subject()
markerListLoaded$ = this.markerListLoaded.asObservable();
constructor() {
const combinedValues = combineLatest(mapLoaded$, markerListLoaded$);
combinedValues.subscribe((value) => {
// Here you can write code when you receive notification from both the events.
})
}
mapLoaded(mapLoadedData) {
this.mapLoaded$.next('map loaded successfully');
}
markersLoaded(markersLoadedData) {
this.markerListLoaded$.next('markers loaded successfully');
}
}
I am new in angular working on a project.My problem is that i want to transfer data from one component to other. Actually i want to show data in text field from database and then have to update it. I have one component name ricerca.component.ts in which data in table is showing. now when i click on specific line(row) then data for that specific record i have to show in my other component name as generatecontract.comonent.ts. I don't know how to perform this.
I made a model name ContractDblist assign all these value to that model but unfortunatelly not solved the problem in other component
this is my ricercacomponnet code
if(tag === 'Item1'){
this.router.navigate(['/workflow/rigester' ]);
}
}
public lstContractRecordDbValue :any[];
getContractRecordbyParameter(selecteditem: any, index: number) { this.workFlowService.getContractRecordbyParameter(selecteditem).subscribe(data => {
this.lstContractRecordDbValue = data;
this.contractdblist.cnt_num=this.lstContractRecordDbValue[0].CNT_NUM;
this.contractdblist.contract=this.lstContractRecordDbValue[0].CONTRACT; this.contractdblist.contacttype=this.lstContractRecordDbValue[0].CONTRACT_TYPE; this.contractdblist.contractno=this.lstContractRecordDbValue[0].CONTRACT_NO;
this.loading = false;
}, error => {
console.error('getAllTickets', error);
this.loading = false;
})
}
You can use Subject to do that
import { Injectable } from "#angular/core";
import { Subject } from "rxjs";
#Injectable()
export class MessageService {
private subject = new Subject<any>();
constructor() {}
sendMessage(message: any) {
this.subject.next(message);
}
getData() {
return this.subject.asObservable();
}
}
So you can call MessageService class method sendMessage() to send data
I defined 2 method here. The first method using next() to send message to the next subcriber. So in your component you just need to simply subscribe like this to get the data
private subscription$: Subscription;
public ngOnInit(): void {
this.subscription$ = this.messageervice
.getData()
.subscribe(data => { console.log(data); })
}
public ngOnDestroy(): void {
this.subscription$.unsubscribe();
}
There are many ways to do so some of them are
using input decorator when passing data from parent to child component.
using output decorator with event emitter when passing data from child to parent component.
using subjects for components not related to each other.
using a service to set and get data to be passed.
you can refer their official website for all the above ways.
I have an application that is listening for incoming data from an IPC Renderer Channel. Here is my setup:
container that sends data to angular app (mainWindow):
mainWindow.loadURL('http://www.myangularapp.com') //where the angular app lives (example url).
mainWindow.webContents.on('did-finish-load', () => {
const data = { name: "John Doe", address: "123 Main St", city: "NY"}
mainWindow.webContents.send('data-from-container', data)
}
})
angular app:
constructor(
private store: Store<fromStore.AppState>,
private cd: ChangeDetectorRef,
private zone: NgZone,
) {}
ngOnInit() {
this.isLoading = true;
if (this.electronService.ipcRenderer) {
this.electronService.ipcRenderer.on('data-from-container', (event, data) => {
this.zone.run(() => {
if(data){
setTimeout(() => {
console.log(data) // verified data is always received
this.formData = data; // property that form uses to populate data in the dom
this.prepopulateForm(data) // method that places incoming data in ngrx store
}, 1000)
}
})
})
}
this.store.select('containerData').subscribe(data => {
setTimeout(()=> {
console.log(data) // data is always being set in ngrx
this.isLoading = false
}, 5000);
})
}
Everytime the IPC Channel emits the 'data-from-container' event, the data is always getting received from my OnInit call, but the data doesn't always get set in my form! The pattern that i've noticed is typically that the data does not prepopulate the form when the angular app first launches inside the container, after the initial launch, every subsequent time the app is launched, the data appears.
I've tried using ngZone, setTimeout, and detectChange methods to trigger Change Detection so the Angular App can detect the newly set formData, but its not consistently prepopulating the form. Any suggestions on how to fix this?
I have a very basic knowledge of electron, so i'll try to show you the idea. For me, your problem comes from the initialization of the view. You're not loosing events because you can see them in the console but not in the view, which enforces my guesses.
As shown in your code, your are sending only one event (I suppose it's only for testing raison) and we want to show it when the view is rendered.
In your component add a subject which informes us that the view is initialized, like:
import { Subject, combineLatest, fromEvent } from 'rxjs';
viewInitialized$ = new Subject();
...
ngAfterViewInit() {
this.viewInitialized$.next();
}
...
Now we can wait the two emissions to come, one from the ipcRenderer and the other from viewInitialized$by using combineLatest operator.
Before that, we have to convert the ipcRenderer to an Observable. From this SO response we can do fromEvent(ipcRenderer,'data-from-container'). If it does not work we can use another subject that emits events each time we receive something in ipcRenderer.on(), the second solution requires ngZone.
ngOnInit() {
...
const containerData$ = fromEvent(this.electronService.ipcRenderer, 'data-from-container');
this.subscription = combineLatest(containerData$, this.viewInitialized$).subscribe(combined => {
const data = combined[0];
this.formData = data;
this.prepopulateForm(data)
})
...
}
ngOnDestroy() {
this.subscription.unsubscribe();
}
Hope this helps.
I'm currently developing an application with Angular using redux principle with ngrx.
I'm looking for a best practice for reacting to state changes and call some component logic depending on this state. I'll give you an (simplified) example to make clear what I mean:
reducers.ts
import {createSelector} from 'reselect';
export const getViewTypeOrFilterChanged = createSelector(isLoading, getActiveViewType, getActiveFilter, (isLoading, activeViewType, activeFilter) => {
// ensure that data is loaded
if (!isLoading) {
return {
activeViewType: activeViewType,
activeFilter: activeFilter
};
}
});
example-component.ts
#Component({ ... })
export class ExampleComponent implements OnInit {
// properties ...
constructor(private store: Store<fromRoot.AppState>) {
}
ngOnInit() {
this.subscriptions.push(
this.store.select(fromRoot.getViewTypeOrFilterChanged).subscribe((result) => {
if (result) {
this.property1 = result.activeType;
this.dependentHelperClass.method1(result.activeFilter);
this.method1();
this.method2(result.activeFilter);
this.method3();
}
})
);
}
ngOnDestroy() {
this.subscriptions.forEach((subscription: Subscription) => {
subscription.unsubscribe();
});
}
// methods ...
}
As you can see I'm also using reselct to combine three different slices of state within a selector (getViewTypeOrFilterChanged). In the subscription to this selector I then want to take some actions according to the combined state.
The thing is, I'm feeling like using ngrx store and subscriptions more in a way of publish/subscribe pattern here and it feels not quite correct. Also the subscriptions (I have multiple ones) in ngOnInit and unsubscriptions in ngOnDestroy bother me, but I can't think of a way achieving the same results using e.g. async pipe.
Is there maybe a more elegant way of reacting to (combined) state changes?
Thanks!
With RxJS you should think of everything as a stream - the following code is just as an example, because I don't really know any of your UI-logic so just look at the structure and not at the logic of the code, since it's more like a very wild guess of mine:
#Component({ ... })
export class ExampleComponent implements OnInit {
private destroyed$ = new Subject<boolean>();
// the following streams can be used in the controller
// as well as in the template via | async
// the .share() is just so the | async pipe won't cause unneccessary stream-creations (the result should be the same regardless of the .share(), it's just a minor performance-enhancement when using multiple | async)
isLoading$ = this.store.select(fromRoot.isLoading).share();
activeViewType$ = this.store.select(fromRoot.getActiveViewType).share();
activeFilter$ = this.store.select(fromRoot.getActiveFilter).share();
activeViewTypeAndFilter$ = Observable.combineLatest(this.activeViewType$, this.activeFilter$).share();
constructor(private store: Store<fromRoot.AppState>) {
}
ngOnInit() {
this.isLoading$
.filter(isLoading => !isLoading) // the initial stream will not emit anything until "loading" was false once
.switchMapTo(this.activeViewTypeAndFilter$)
.do([viewType, filter] => {
this.dependentHelperClass.method1(activeFilter);
this.method1();
this.method2(activeFilter);
this.method3();
})
.takeUntil(this.destroyed$) //this stream will automatically be unsubscribed when the destroyed$-subject "triggers"
.subscribe();
}
ngOnDestroy() {
this.destroyed$.next(true);
this.destroyed$.complete();
}
// methods ...
}
As I said: logic-wise I cannot say if this is what you need, but that's just a question of using different operators and/or a different order to arrange your "main-stream" differntly.
I'm making a real estate website using Angular 2, Google Maps, etc. and when a user changes the center of the map I perform a search to the API indicating the current position of the map as well as the radius. The thing is, I want to reflect those values in the url without reloading the entire page. Is that possible? I've found some solutions using AngularJS 1.x but nothing about Angular 2.
As of RC6 you can do the following to change URL without change state and thereby keeping your route history
import {OnInit} from '#angular/core';
import {Location} from '#angular/common';
// If you dont import this angular will import the wrong "Location"
#Component({
selector: 'example-component',
templateUrl: 'xxx.html'
})
export class ExampleComponent implements OnInit
{
constructor( private location: Location )
{}
ngOnInit()
{
this.location.replaceState("/some/newstate/");
}
}
You could use location.go(url) which will basically change your url, without change in route of application.
NOTE this could cause other effect like redirect to child route from the current route.
Related question which describes location.go will not intimate to Router to happen changes.
Using location.go(url) is the way to go, but instead of hardcoding the url , consider generating it using router.createUrlTree().
Given that you want to do the following router call: this.router.navigate([{param: 1}], {relativeTo: this.activatedRoute}) but without reloading the component, it can be rewritten as:
const url = this.router.createUrlTree([], {relativeTo: this.activatedRoute, queryParams: {param: 1}}).toString()
this.location.go(url);
For anyone like me finding this question the following might be useful.
I had a similar problem and initially tried using location.go and location.replaceState as suggested in other answers here. However I ran into problems when I had to navigate to another page on the app because the navigation was relative to the current route and the current route wasn't being updated by location.go or location.replaceState (the router doesn't know anything about what these do to the URL)
In essence I needed a solution that DIDN'T reload the page/component when the route parameter changed but DID update the route state internally.
I ended up using query parameters. You can find more about it here: https://angular-2-training-book.rangle.io/handout/routing/query_params.html
So if you need to do something like save an order and get an order ID you can update your page URL like shown below. Updating a centre location and related data on a map would be similar
// let's say we're saving an order. Initally the URL is just blah/orders
save(orderId) {
// [Here we would call back-end to save the order in the database]
this.router.navigate(['orders'], { queryParams: { id: orderId } });
// now the URL is blah/orders?id:1234. We don't reload the orders
// page or component so get desired behaviour of not seeing any
// flickers or resetting the page.
}
and you keep track of it within the ngOnInit method like:
ngOnInit() {
this.orderId = this.route
.queryParamMap
.map(params => params.get('id') || null);
// orderID is up-to-date with what is saved in database now, or if
// nothing is saved and hence no id query paramter the orderId variable
// is simply null.
// [You can load the order here from its ID if this suits your design]
}
If you need to go direct to the order page with a new (unsaved) order you can do:
this.router.navigate(['orders']);
Or if you need to go direct to the order page for an existing (saved) order you can do:
this.router.navigate(['orders'], { queryParams: { id: '1234' } });
I had major trouble getting this to work in RCx releases of angular2. The Location package has moved, and running location.go() inside constructor() wont work. It needs to be ngOnInit() or later in the lifecycle. Here is some example code:
import {OnInit} from '#angular/core';
import {Location} from '#angular/common';
#Component({
selector: 'example-component',
templateUrl: 'xxx.html'
})
export class ExampleComponent implements OnInit
{
constructor( private location: Location )
{}
ngOnInit()
{
this.location.go( '/example;example_param=917' );
}
}
Here are the angular resources on the matter:
https://angular.io/docs/ts/latest/api/common/index/Location-class.html
https://angular.io/docs/ts/latest/api/common/index/LocationStrategy-class.html
I've had similar requirements as described in the question and it took a while to figure things out based on existing answers, so I would like to share my final solution.
Requirements
The state of my view (component, technically) can be changed by the user (filter settings, sorting options, etc.) When state changes happen, i.e. the user changes the sorting direction, I want to:
Reflect the state changes in the URL
Handle state changes, i.e. make an API call to receive a new result set
additionally, I would like to:
Specify if the URL changes are considered in the browser history (back/forward) based on circumstances
use complex objects as state params to provide greater flexibility in handling of state changes (optional, but makes life easier for example when some state changes trigger backend/API calls while others are handled by the frontend internally)
Solution: Change state without reloading component
A state change does not cause a component reload when using route parameters or query parameters. The component instance stays alive. I see no good reason to mess with the router state by using Location.go() or location.replaceState().
var state = { q: 'foo', sort: 'bar' };
var url = this.router.createUrlTree([], { relativeTo: this.activatedRoute, queryParams: state }).toString();
this.router.navigateByUrl(url);
The state object will be transformed to URL query params by Angular's Router:
https://localhost/some/route?q=foo&sort=bar
Solution: Handling state changes to make API calls
The state changes triggered above can be handled by subscribing to ActivatedRoute.queryParams:
export class MyComponent implements OnInit {
constructor(private activatedRoute: ActivatedRoute) { }
ngOnInit()
{
this.activatedRoute.queryParams.subscribe((params) => {
// params is the state object passed to the router on navigation
// Make API calls here
});
}
}
The state object of the above axample will be passed as the params argument of the queryParams observable. In the handler API calls can be made if necessary.
But: I would prefer handling the state changes directly in my component and avoid the detour over ActivatedRoute.queryParams. IMO, navigating the router, letting Angular do routing magic and handle the queryParams change to do something, completely obfuscates whats happening in my component with regards to maintenability and readability of my code. What I do instead:
Compare the state passed in to queryParams observable with the current state in my component, do nothing, if it hasn't changed there and handle state changes directly instead:
export class MyComponent implements OnInit {
private _currentState;
constructor(private activatedRoute: ActivatedRoute) { }
ngOnInit()
{
this.activatedRoute.queryParams.subscribe((params) => {
// Following comparison assumes, that property order doesn't change
if (JSON.stringify(this._currentState) == JSON.stringify(params)) return;
// The followig code will be executed only when the state changes externally, i.e. through navigating to a URL with params by the user
this._currentState = params;
this.makeApiCalls();
});
}
updateView()
{
this.makeApiCalls();
this.updateUri();
}
updateUri()
{
var url = this.router.createUrlTree([], { relativeTo: this.activatedRoute, queryParams: this._currentState }).toString();
this.router.navigateByUrl(url);
}
}
Solution: Specify browser history behavior
var createHistoryEntry = true // or false
var url = ... // see above
this.router.navigateByUrl(url, { replaceUrl : !createHistoryEntry});
Solution: Complex objects as state
This is beyond the original question but adresses common scenarios and might thus be useful: The state object above is limited to flat objects (an object with only simple string/bool/int/... properties but no nested objects). I found this limiting, because I need to distinguish between properties that need to be handled with a backend call and others, that are only used by the component internally. I wanted a state object like:
var state = { filter: { something: '', foo: 'bar' }, viewSettings: { ... } };
To use this state as queryParams object for the router, it needs to be flattened. I simply JSON.stringify all first level properties of the object:
private convertToParamsData(data) {
var params = {};
for (var prop in data) {
if (Object.prototype.hasOwnProperty.call(data, prop)) {
var value = data[prop];
if (value == null || value == undefined) continue;
params[prop] = JSON.stringify(value, (k, v) => {
if (v !== null) return v
});
}
}
return params;
}
and back, when handling the queryParams returned passed in by the router:
private convertFromParamsData(params) {
var data = {};
for (var prop in params) {
if (Object.prototype.hasOwnProperty.call(params, prop)) {
data[prop] = JSON.parse(params[prop]);
}
}
return data;
}
Finally: A ready-to-use Angular service
And finally, all of this isolated in one simple service:
import { Injectable } from '#angular/core';
import { ActivatedRoute, Router } from '#angular/router';
import { Observable } from 'rxjs';
import { Location } from '#angular/common';
import { map, filter, tap } from 'rxjs/operators';
#Injectable()
export class QueryParamsService {
private currentParams: any;
externalStateChange: Observable<any>;
constructor(private activatedRoute: ActivatedRoute, private router: Router, private location: Location) {
this.externalStateChange = this.activatedRoute.queryParams
.pipe(map((flatParams) => {
var params = this.convertFromParamsData(flatParams);
return params
}))
.pipe(filter((params) => {
return !this.equalsCurrentParams(params);
}))
.pipe(tap((params) => {
this.currentParams = params;
}));
}
setState(data: any, createHistoryEntry = false) {
var flat = this.convertToParamsData(data);
const url = this.router.createUrlTree([], { relativeTo: this.activatedRoute, queryParams: flat }).toString();
this.currentParams = data;
this.router.navigateByUrl(url, { replaceUrl: !createHistoryEntry });
}
private equalsCurrentParams(data) {
var isEqual = JSON.stringify(data) == JSON.stringify(this.currentParams);
return isEqual;
}
private convertToParamsData(data) {
var params = {};
for (var prop in data) {
if (Object.prototype.hasOwnProperty.call(data, prop)) {
var value = data[prop];
if (value == null || value == undefined) continue;
params[prop] = JSON.stringify(value, (k, v) => {
if (v !== null) return v
});
}
}
return params;
}
private convertFromParamsData(params) {
var data = {};
for (var prop in params) {
if (Object.prototype.hasOwnProperty.call(params, prop)) {
data[prop] = JSON.parse(params[prop]);
}
}
return data;
}
}
which can be used like:
#Component({
selector: "app-search",
templateUrl: "./search.component.html",
styleUrls: ["./search.component.scss"],
providers: [QueryParamsService]
})
export class ProjectSearchComponent implements OnInit {
filter : any;
viewSettings : any;
constructor(private queryParamsService: QueryParamsService) { }
ngOnInit(): void {
this.queryParamsService.externalStateChange
.pipe(debounce(() => interval(500))) // Debounce optional
.subscribe(params => {
// Set state from params, i.e.
if (params.filter) this.filter = params.filter;
if (params.viewSettings) this.viewSettings = params.viewSettings;
// You might want to init this.filter, ... with default values here
// If you want to write default values to URL, you can call setState here
this.queryParamsService.setState(params, false); // false = no history entry
this.initializeView(); //i.e. make API calls
});
}
updateView() {
var data = {
filter: this.filter,
viewSettings: this.viewSettings
};
this.queryParamsService.setState(data, true);
// Do whatever to update your view
}
// ...
}
Don't forget the providers: [QueryParamsService] statement on component level to create a new service instance for the component. Don't register the service globally on app module.
I use this way to get it:
const queryParamsObj = {foo: 1, bar: 2, andThis: 'text'};
this.location.replaceState(
this.router.createUrlTree(
[this.locationStrategy.path().split('?')[0]], // Get uri
{queryParams: queryParamsObj} // Pass all parameters inside queryParamsObj
).toString()
);
-- EDIT --
I think that I should add some more informations for this.
If you use this.location.replaceState() router of your application is not updated, so if you use router information later it's not equal for this in your browser. For example if you use localizeService to change language, after switch language your application back to last URL where you was before change it with this.location.replaceState().
If you don't want this behaviour you can chose different method for update URL, like:
this.router.navigate(
[this.locationStrategy.path().split('?')[0]],
{queryParams: queryParamsObj}
);
In this option your browser also doesn't refresh but your URL change is also injected into Router of your application, so when you switch language you don't have problem like in this.location.replaceState().
Of course you can choose method for your needs. The first is more lighter because you don't engage your application more than change URL in browser.
Use attribute queryParamsHandling: 'merge' while changing the url.
this.router.navigate([], {
queryParams: this.queryParams,
queryParamsHandling: 'merge',
replaceUrl: true,
});
For me it was actually a mix of both with Angular 4.4.5.
Using router.navigate kept destroying my url by not respecting the realtiveTo: activatedRoute part.
I've ended up with:
this._location.go(this._router.createUrlTree([this._router.url], { queryParams: { profile: value.id } }).toString())
In 2021 here is the solution I use. Create URL Tree using createUrlTree and navigate to route using location
//Build URL Tree
const urlTree = this.router.createUrlTree(["/employee/"+this.employeeId],{
relativeTo: this.route,
queryParams: params,
queryParamsHandling: 'merge'
});
//Update the URL
this.location.go(urlTree.toString());
In my case I needed to remove a query param of the url to prevent user to see it.
I found replaceState safer than location.go because the path with the old query params disappeared of the stack and user can be redo the query related with this query. So, I prefer it to do it:
this.location.replaceState(this.router.url.split('?')[0]);
Whit location.go, go to back with the browser will return to your old path with the query params and will keep it in the navigation stack.
this.location.go(this.router.url.split('?')[0]);
it's better to use activatedRoute.navigate() to change URL parameters and use snapshot (not subscribe) to call API if u don't want to call API when URL parameters change.
export class MyComponent implements OnInit {
constructor(private activatedRoute: ActivatedRoute) { }
ngOnInit()
{
const params = this.activatedRoute.snapshot.queryParams;
// params is the state object passed to the router on navigation
// Make API calls here
}
}
import { Component, OnInit } from '#angular/core';
import { Location } from '#angular/common';
#Component({
selector: 'child-component',
templateUrl: 'child.component.html',
styleUrls: ['child.component.scss']
})
export class ChildComponent implements OnInit {
constructor(
private location: Location
) {}
ngOnInit() {
// you can put 'this.location.go()' method call in any another method
this.location.go('parentRoute/anotherChildRoute');
}
}
For me, it changes child route in browser, without any current component reloading.
I was trying to update queryparams and navigate without reloading. By nature activatedRoute.snapshot.queryparams are readonly. And this turnaround approach solved my problem.
// Get queryparams
let state = Object.assign({}, this.route.snapshot.queryParams)
// Change parameters of url
state["z"] = "hi";
state["y"] = "bye";
// Create url and navigate to it without reloading
const url = this.router.createUrlTree([], { relativeTo: this.route, queryParams: state }).toString();
this.router.navigateByUrl(url);