I have to get the value of an input text with AngularJS but without using Controller.
How i can get this value?
I saw this posts but uses .controller
link post
You can use this code, with angular.element:
angular.element(document.querySelector('#your_input_tag_id')).val();
or, with simple jQuery:
$('#your_input_tag_id').val();
make your input a model and the value will always be available as the model
<input type="text" ng-model="myModelName">
and then your value will be available within the scope of your module as myModelName
console.log('value = ' + $scope.myModelName);
, if you are trying to get the value from somewhere other than the scope of the module or app then you are probably doing it wrong and not the angular way, it really is best to use a controller or link function even if it's the main app controller or link function, and you would be well placed to push back on any requirement not to use a controller (which sounds like a bad or misunderstood requirement).
Rather than querying the DOM for elements (which isn't very angular see How do I "think in AngularJS" if I have a jQuery background?) you should perform your DOM manipulation within your directive. The element is available to you in your link function.
So in your myDirective
return {
link: function (scope, element, attr) {
element.html('Hello world');
}
}
If you must perform the query outside of the directive then it would be possible to use querySelectorAll in modern browers
angular.element(document.querySelectorAll("[my-directive]"));
$('#your_input_tag_id').val();
however you would need to use jquery to support IE8 and backwards
angular.element($("[my-directive]"));
Related
I'm a bit confused with the use of $scope in controllers and of scope in directives. Please verify if my understanding is correct (and also provide some alternative ways how to do this).
Let's say I have an html:
<div ng-controller="app1_Ctrl">
.
.
.
<input type="text" ng-model="value"/>
<input type="checkbox" />
<button ng-click="submit()"></button>
</div>
And my main.js
(function() {
angular.module('mainApp', ['app1']);
})();
And my app1 looks like this (based on official AngularJS documentation here)
(function() {
var app = angular.module('app1', []);
app.controller('app1_Ctrl', ["$scope", function($scope) {
.
.
.
}]);
app.directive('app1_Dir1', [function() {
function link(scope, element, attr) {
scope.$watch(attr.someAttrOfCheckBox, function() {
// some logic here
});
function submit() {
// some logic here
}
}
return link;
}]);
})();
How does $scope.value passed in scope in directive so that I can do some manipulations there? Will ng-click fire the function submit() in the directive link? Is it correct to use scope.$watch to listen for an action (ticked or unticked of course) in checkbox element?
Many thanks to those who can explain.
By default, directive scope is controller $scope; but it means the directive is directly dependent on your controller and you need a different controller for each instance of the directive you want to use. It is usually considered a best practice to isolate your directive scope and specifically define the variables you wish to pass it from your controller.
For this, you will need to add a scope statement to your directive :
scope {
label :'#',
context : '=',
function : '&'
}
and update your view :
<my-directive label="labelFromController" context="ctxtFromController" function="myFunction()" ></my-directive>
The symbols denote the kind of thing you wish to pass through : # is for one-way binding (as a string in your directive), = is for two-way binding of an object (which enables the directive to update something in your controller), and & is for passing a function.
There are a lot of additional options and subtleties that are best explained by the Angular doc https://docs.angularjs.org/guide/directive. There are also some nice tutorials out there (e.g. http://www.sitepoint.com/practical-guide-angularjs-directives/)
Your submit() function is not attached to anything, so you won't be able to call if from your viewer. You need to define it as scope.submit = function() ... in your link function if you wish to access it.
You can use $watch for this kind of thing, but there are usually other more elegant ways to achieve this by leveraging the fact that angular already "watches" the variables it is aware of and monitors any changes he can (this can be an issue when some external service changes data for exemple, because angular cannot listen to events it is not made aware of). Here, you can probably simply associate the ng-model directive to your input checkbox to store its true/fale (checked/unchecked) value, and the ng-change or ng-click directives to act on it. The optimal solution will mostly depend on the exact nature of your business logic.
Some additional thoughts :
The HTML insides of your directive should be packaged in an inline template field, or in a separate HTML file referenced by the templateUrl field in your directive.
In your HTML code above, your directive is not referenced anywhere. It should be an element, attribute or class (and your directive definition should reflect the way it can be called, with the restrict field). Maybe you have omitted the line containing the directive HTML, but as it stands, your directive doesn't do anything.
To my knowledge, you don't need to return link. Think of it as the "body" of your directive, where you define the variables and functions you will call in the HTML.
Your directive doesn't actually need HTML code and the above thoughts might be irrelevant if you are going in a different direction, but encapsulating some kind of view behaviour that you want to reuse is probably the most common use of directives.
I am creating a game where the first thing that needs to happen is some state is loaded in from an external JSON file - the contents of one of my directives are dependent on this data being available - because of this, I would like to delay applying the directive until after the data has loaded. I have written the following:
window.addEventListener('mythdataLoaded', function (e) {
// Don't try to create characters until mythdata has loaded
quest.directive('character', function() {
return {
restrict: 'A',
scope: {
character: '#'
},
controller: 'CharacterCtrl',
templateUrl: 'partials/character.html',
replace: true,
link: function(scope, element) {
$(document).on('click', '#'+scope.character, function () {
$('#'+scope.character+'-popup').fadeToggle();
});
}
};
});
});
// Load in myth data
var myth_data;
$.getJSON("js/mythdata_playtest.json", function(json) {
myth_data = json;
window.dispatchEvent(new Event('mythdataLoaded'));
});
However, it appears that my directive's link function never runs - I'm thinking this is because angular has already executed the part of it's cycle where directives are compiled/linked by the time this directive gets added. Is there some way to force angular to compile this directive after it is created? I googled around a bit, and some people suggested adding $compile to the link function for similar issues - but the link function is never run, so that doesn't work for this case. Thanks!
It seems to me it would be better to always configure the directive, to do the JSON call in the directive, and attach logic to the element in the JSON call's success handler. This would, if I understand you correctly, do what you want.
AngularJS is meant as a framework, not a library, so using it in the way you mentioned is not recommended. Exactly as you mentioned, AngularJS does a lot of things for you when it runs. AngularJS, by default, runs on document loaded, and your $.getJSON callback arrives after that. When AngularJS runs it does all its magic with compiling the content and all that.
As a sidenote, it's also more the Angular way to use $http over $.getJSON.
I think you're thinking about this the wrong way. A major ideology in angular is that you set up declarative elements and let it react to the state of the scope.
What I think you might want to do is pass in what you need through the directive scope, and use other angular built in directives to hide or show your default ("non directive") state until the scope gets set from the controller for example.
Example:
You want a box to be hidden until an api call comes back. Your directive sets special styles on your element (not hidden). Instead of delaying to dynamically set your directive, you can pass in a scope var with a default value and use something like ng-show="data.ready" in your directive template to handle the actual dom stuff.
I need to perform some operations on scope and the template. It seems that I can do that in either the link function or the controller function (since both have access to the scope).
When is it the case when I have to use link function and not the controller?
angular.module('myApp').directive('abc', function($timeout) {
return {
restrict: 'EA',
replace: true,
transclude: true,
scope: true,
link: function(scope, elem, attr) { /* link function */ },
controller: function($scope, $element) { /* controller function */ }
};
}
Also, I understand that link is the non-angular world. So, I can use $watch, $digest and $apply.
What is the significance of the link function, when we already had controller?
After my initial struggle with the link and controller functions and reading quite a lot about them, I think now I have the answer.
First lets understand,
How do angular directives work in a nutshell:
We begin with a template (as a string or loaded to a string)
var templateString = '<div my-directive>{{5 + 10}}</div>';
Now, this templateString is wrapped as an angular element
var el = angular.element(templateString);
With el, now we compile it with $compile to get back the link function.
var l = $compile(el)
Here is what happens,
$compile walks through the whole template and collects all the directives that it recognizes.
All the directives that are discovered are compiled recursively and their link functions are collected.
Then, all the link functions are wrapped in a new link function and returned as l.
Finally, we provide scope function to this l (link) function which further executes the wrapped link functions with this scope and their corresponding elements.
l(scope)
This adds the template as a new node to the DOM and invokes controller which adds its watches to the scope which is shared with the template in DOM.
Comparing compile vs link vs controller :
Every directive is compiled only once and link function is retained for re-use. Therefore, if there's something applicable to all instances of a directive should be performed inside directive's compile function.
Now, after compilation we have link function which is executed while attaching the template to the DOM. So, therefore we perform everything that is specific to every instance of the directive. For eg: attaching events, mutating the template based on scope, etc.
Finally, the controller is meant to be available to be live and reactive while the directive works on the DOM (after getting attached). Therefore:
(1) After setting up the view[V] (i.e. template) with link. $scope is our [M] and $controller is our [C] in M V C
(2) Take advantage the 2-way binding with $scope by setting up watches.
(3) $scope watches are expected to be added in the controller since this is what is watching the template during run-time.
(4) Finally, controller is also used to be able to communicate among related directives. (Like myTabs example in https://docs.angularjs.org/guide/directive)
(5) It's true that we could've done all this in the link function as well but its about separation of concerns.
Therefore, finally we have the following which fits all the pieces perfectly :
Why controllers are needed
The difference between link and controller comes into play when you want to nest directives in your DOM and expose API functions from the parent directive to the nested ones.
From the docs:
Best Practice: use controller when you want to expose an API to other directives. Otherwise use link.
Say you want to have two directives my-form and my-text-input and you want my-text-input directive to appear only inside my-form and nowhere else.
In that case, you will say while defining the directive my-text-input that it requires a controller from the parent DOM element using the require argument, like this: require: '^myForm'. Now the controller from the parent element will be injected into the link function as the fourth argument, following $scope, element, attributes. You can call functions on that controller and communicate with the parent directive.
Moreover, if such a controller is not found, an error will be raised.
Why use link at all
There is no real need to use the link function if one is defining the controller since the $scope is available on the controller. Moreover, while defining both link and controller, one does need to be careful about the order of invocation of the two (controller is executed before).
However, in keeping with the Angular way, most DOM manipulation and 2-way binding using $watchers is usually done in the link function while the API for children and $scope manipulation is done in the controller. This is not a hard and fast rule, but doing so will make the code more modular and help in separation of concerns (controller will maintain the directive state and link function will maintain the DOM + outside bindings).
The controller function/object represents an abstraction model-view-controller (MVC). While there is nothing new to write about MVC, it is still the most significant advanatage of angular: split the concerns into smaller pieces. And that's it, nothing more, so if you need to react on Model changes coming from View the Controller is the right person to do that job.
The story about link function is different, it is coming from different perspective then MVC. And is really essential, once we want to cross the boundaries of a controller/model/view (template).
Let' start with the parameters which are passed into the link function:
function link(scope, element, attrs) {
scope is an Angular scope object.
element is the jqLite-wrapped element that this directive matches.
attrs is an object with the normalized attribute names and their corresponding values.
To put the link into the context, we should mention that all directives are going through this initialization process steps: Compile, Link. An Extract from Brad Green and Shyam Seshadri book Angular JS:
Compile phase (a sister of link, let's mention it here to get a clear picture):
In this phase, Angular walks the DOM to identify all the registered
directives in the template. For each directive, it then transforms the
DOM based on the directive’s rules (template, replace, transclude, and
so on), and calls the compile function if it exists. The result is a
compiled template function,
Link phase:
To make the view dynamic, Angular then runs a link function for each
directive. The link functions typically creates listeners on the DOM
or the model. These listeners keep the view and the model in sync at
all times.
A nice example how to use the link could be found here: Creating Custom Directives. See the example: Creating a Directive that Manipulates the DOM, which inserts a "date-time" into page, refreshed every second.
Just a very short snippet from that rich source above, showing the real manipulation with DOM. There is hooked function to $timeout service, and also it is cleared in its destructor call to avoid memory leaks
.directive('myCurrentTime', function($timeout, dateFilter) {
function link(scope, element, attrs) {
...
// the not MVC job must be done
function updateTime() {
element.text(dateFilter(new Date(), format)); // here we are manipulating the DOM
}
function scheduleUpdate() {
// save the timeoutId for canceling
timeoutId = $timeout(function() {
updateTime(); // update DOM
scheduleUpdate(); // schedule the next update
}, 1000);
}
element.on('$destroy', function() {
$timeout.cancel(timeoutId);
});
...
I have the following html (which can be accessed directly or called via ajax):
<section id="content" ng-controller="setTreeDataCtrl" get-subthemes>
<dl ng-repeat="subtheme in allSubthemes">
<dt>{{subtheme.Title}}</dt>
</dl>
Then I'm using the following directive:
myApp.directive('getSubthemes', function() {
return function($scope, element, attrs) {
$scope.allSubthemes = [];
angular.forEach($scope.data.Themes, function(value, key) {
angular.forEach(value.SubThemes, function(value2, key2) {
$scope.allSubthemes.push({
'ThemeTitle': value.Title,
'ThemeUrlSlug': value.UrlSlug,
'Title': value2.Title,
'UrlSlug': value2.UrlSlug
});
});
});
}
});
$scope.allSubthemes seems ok, but the dl's don't get rendered.
I can see for a second everything rendered properly and then it get's back to {{subtheme.Title}}, almost like it's being "unrendered"... any ideas of what I'm doing wrong?
Demo jsFiddle: http://jsfiddle.net/HMp3a/
rGil fixed the jsFiddle. It was missing a ng-app="pddc" declaration on an element so Angular did not know where to begin its magic.
I'd like to mention another way to render to the data in question. I suggest using an ng-repeat within an ng-repeat. See my forked & updated fiddle here. You can actually refer to the parent theme within the ng-repeat of the subtheme, so you don't have to copy values from the parent theme into each subtheme (which effectively eliminates the need for the directive in this example).
Another reason to use a nested ng-repeat is because of async issues that could come up when pulling data from a web service asynchronously. What could happen is when the directive executes, it may not have any data to loop through and populate because the data hasn't arrived yet.
If you use two ng-repeats, Angular will watch the $scope.data and re-run the ng-repeats when the data arrives. I've added a 500 ms delay to setting the data in my example to simulate web service latency and you'll see that even with the "latency", the data eventually renders.
There are two other ways around the async issue:
Use scope.$watch() in your directive, to watch for the data manually, or
Use the "resolve" functionality from Angular's routing feature to make sure the data is retrieved prior to controller execution.
While these alternative methods work, I think both are more complicated then just using two ng-repeats.
Within a directive definition, there's an API for accessing $element and $attrs, so you can refer back to the element from which the directive was called. How would I access $element and $attrs when calling a custom function using a standard directive like ng-class?
EDIT: I understand that this is not an idiomatic approach. This question is applicable to rapid prototypes, which is a great use for many of Angular's features. Just not the ones that are all about sustainability, separation of concerns, etc. My primary concern is velocity. Thus, being able to bang something out quickly with the built-in directives and a quick controller method can, in fact, be a virtue, and can win the opportunity to do a fuller and more proper implementation down the road...
In this case, I'm just adding a contextual .active class to a nav element, based on the value of $location.path(), as per this post and this one. However, in those examples you need to explicitly and redundantly pass a copy of the contents of the href attribute as an argument to the getClass() function you're calling from ng-class. But isn't there a way to programmatically access the href attribute from within getClass() and avoid redundantly passing identical content as an arg?
For example, a controller with a getClass() function the way I'd imagine it could work:
function navCtrl($scope, $routeParams) {
$scope.getClass = function($element, $attrs) {
if ($location.path().substr(0, path.length) == $attrs.href) {
return "active"
} else {
return ""
}
}
}
Which you could then call simply and elegantly with:
<a ng-class="getClass()" href="/tasks">Tasks</a>
rather than:
<a ng-class="getClass('/tasks')" href="/tasks">Tasks</a>
(I recognize another option is to create a custom directive that does this, but for now I'd just like to figure out if it's possible to access $attrs and/or $element from within a controller function that's been called by a directive. Thanks!)
You actually can do this... BUT YOU SHOULD NOT DO THIS. lol...
Here's how to do what you're asking...
In your markup, pass $event into your function.
<a ng-click="test($event)" href="whatever">Click Me</a>
Then in your controller, get the target element of the event:
$scope.test = function($event) {
alert($event.target.href);
};
Now here is why you probably shouldn't do this:
If you reference the DOM, or manipulate the DOM in your controller, you're endangering dependency injection and also the separation of concerns from within the Angular structure. Sure you could still inject $event as a dependency if you were testing your function, but depending on what you're doing inside of that function, you might still have ruined your DI, and you're trying to make a controller do a directive's work (which is to try to keep your controller from being tightly-coupled to your markup)
That said, if ALL your doing is just getting a value, it's probably fine, but you're still coupling your controller to your markup to some degree. If you're doing anything else with that DOM element, you're off the reservation.
I don't think you can do that. The angular philosophy is to avoid accessing the DOM directly from your controller. You have already identified your two options for doing this in Angular:
pass in the href as a param i.e.. getClass('/tasks')
or, write a custom directive
Alternatively, if the class is purely presentational and doesn't affect how your application runs then you could ignore angular and use a quick and dirty jQuery function to do the job for you.
The lack of direct interaction with the DOM can be a bit strange at first but it's a godsend in the long term as your codebase grows, gets more complicated and needs more tests.
Here's a completely different answer: you don't need a Angular to change styling based on href. You can use CSS selectors for that.
In your styles:
a[href="/something"] {
background-color: red;
}
That in combination with anything you might be doing with ng-class should be everything you need.