i was trying a sample pagination for that i have created an directive like this(am not sure its correct)
(function() {
app.directive("myPagination", function() {
return {
restrict: 'E',
templateUrl: 'pag.html'
};
});
})();
and my pag.html is
<ul class="pagination" ng-controller="PagingController">
<li ng-repeat="x in pageing" ng-click="change(x.pageno)">{{x.pageno}}</li>
</ul>
and my PageingController is like this
app.controller('PagingController', function($scope) {
$scope.$on('pageinfo', function(event, args) {
$scope.numbtn = args.numbtn;
$scope.totaldata = args.totaldata;
$scope.selet = args.selet;
$scope.starter();
})
$scope.starter = function() {
$scope.pageing = [];
let i;
for (i = 0; i < $scope.numbtn; i++) {
$scope.pageing[i] = i;
}
console.log($scope.pageing);
}
$scope.change = function(btnclk) {
alert(btnclk);
}
});
and <my-pagination></my-pagination> this is how i tried in index page. but the problem is its not showing anything even no errors can any one correct this please
Add the PageingController controller to directive instead of the template
(function() {
app.directive("myPagination", function() {
return {
restrict: 'E',
templateUrl: 'pag.html',
controller : 'PagingController'
};
});
})()
Demo
Make sure subscriber event $on is executing. otherwise page array is empty
I have created a search box which is being used on two different views, one is for searching jobs and the other is for searching companies. I have made two separate controllers for both and separate services as well.
Here is the html for the searchbox -
<span class="searchButton"><i class="fa fa-search fa-2x"></i></span>
<input ng-change="companies.search()"
ng-model="companies.searchTerm"
ng-keydown="companies.deleteTerm($event)"
type="text" id="search-box"
style="width: 0px; visibility:hidden;"/>
Here is a script i am using for styling it -
<script type="text/javascript">
var toggleVar = true;
$('.searchButton').on('click', function() {
if(toggleVar) {
$('.searchButton').animate({right: '210px'}, 400);
$('#search-box').css("visibility", "visible");
setTimeout(function() {
$('.searchButton').css("color", "#444444");
}, 200);
$('#search-box').animate({ width: 185 }, 400).focus();
toggleVar = false;
}
else {
$('#search-box').animate({ width: 0 }, 400);
$('.searchButton').animate({right: '25px'}, 400);
setTimeout(function() {
$('.searchButton').css("color", "#eeeeee");
}, 300);
toggleVar = true;
}
});
$('#search-box').focusout(function() {
if(!toggleVar) {
$('#search-box').animate({ width: 0 }, 400);
$('.searchButton').animate({right: '25px'}, 400);
setTimeout(function() {
$('.searchButton').css("color", "#eeeeee");
}, 300);
toggleVar = true;
}
});
</script>
Controller -
angular.module('jobSeekerApp')
.controller('CompaniesallCtrl', ['getAllCompanies', function (companiesService) {
var ctrl = this;
var count;
ctrl.pageNumber = 1;
ctrl.searchPageNumber = 1;
ctrl.isSearching = false;
ctrl.searchTerm = "";
// Initial page load
companiesService.getCompanies(ctrl.pageNumber)
.then(function(response) {
ctrl.companiesList = response.data.results;
count = response.data.count;
checkCount();
}, function(error) {
console.log(error);
});
// User clicks next button
ctrl.getNext = function() {
// If search is not being used
if(ctrl.searchTerm === "" && ctrl.isSearching === false) {
ctrl.pageNumber = ctrl.pageNumber + 1;
companiesService.getCompanies(ctrl.pageNumber)
.then(function(response) {
ctrl.companiesList = ctrl.companiesList.concat(response.data.results);
checkCount();
}, function(error) {
console.log(error);
});
}
// If search is being used
else {
ctrl.searchPageNumber = ctrl.searchPageNumber + 1;
companiesService.searchCompany(ctrl.searchPageNumber, ctrl.searchTerm)
.then(function(response) {
ctrl.companiesList = ctrl.companiesList.concat(response.data.results);
checkCount();
}, function(error) {
console.log(error);
});
}
};
// User backspaces to delete search term
ctrl.deleteTerm = function (event) {
if(event.keyCode === 8) {
ctrl.searchTermLen = ctrl.searchTermLen - 1;
}
// If search box is empty
ctrl.isSearching = ctrl.searchTermLen !== 0;
};
// User clicks search button
ctrl.search = function() {
ctrl.searchTermLen = ctrl.searchTerm.length;
// If search box is empty, show normal results
if(ctrl.searchTerm === "" && ctrl.isSearching === false) {
ctrl.pageNumber = 1;
companiesService.getCompanies(ctrl.pageNumber)
.then(function(response) {
ctrl.companiesList = response.data.results;
count = response.data.count;
checkCount();
}, function(error) {
console.log(error);
});
}
// If search box is not empty, search the input
else {
ctrl.isSearching = true;
ctrl.searchPageNumber = 1;
companiesService.searchCompany(ctrl.searchPageNumber, ctrl.searchTerm)
.then(function(response) {
ctrl.companiesList = response.data.results;
count = response.data.count;
checkCount();
}, function(error) {
console.log(error);
});
}
};
// Function to hide and show next button
function checkCount() {
console.log(count);
$(".nextButton").toggle(count > 10);
count = count - 10;
}
}]);
I am trying to make a directive for this, since all this code is being repeated for the both the views. But how do I make the directive interact with different controllers. And how do i make this part ng-change="companies.search()" ng-model="companies.searchTerm" ng-keydown="companies.deleteTerm($event)" not dependent on the controllers.
I am new to angular and am not sure if this is the right approach or should i let the keep the code separate? Please help.
Server-Side search logic makes it simple
If it is possible that your search logic resides on the server and searching jobs or companies could be distinguished by simply setting a query variable in the URL, then it easy. You could use 1 search directive with an attribute to say which module to search and include this in your HTTP request.
Client-Side search logic slightly more angularjs
If you need different client-side logic for each type of search, consider this approach where there is 1 common search directive, plus 1 directive for each customized search.
the common search directive controls view + common search functionality
a search-companies directive that is restrict: 'A' and require: 'search' and performs functions specific to the company search
a search-jobs directive that is also restrict: 'A' and require: 'search' and performs functions specific to the job search
The concept is that the custom search directives will provide their controller/api object to the common search directive. The common search directive handles the view-controller interaction and calls the provided API functions for customized search functionality.
In Code, this could look something like:
angular.module('SearchDemo', [])
.directive('search', function(){
return {
restrict: 'E',
templateUrl: '/templates/search.tpl.html',
controller: ['$scope', function($scope){
$scope.results = [];
this.setSearchAPI = function(searchAPI){
this.api = searchAPI;
};
$scope.doSearch = function(query){
$scope.results.length = 0;
// here we call one of the custom controller functions
if(this.api && angular.isFunction(this.api.getResults)){
var results = this.api.getResults(query);
// append the results onto $scope.results
// without creating a new array
$scope.results.push.apply($scope.results, results);
}
};
}]
};
})
.directive('searchCompanies', function(){
return {
restrict: 'A',
require: ['search', 'searchCompanies'],
link: function(scope, elem, attr, Ctrl){
// here we pass the custom search-companies controller
// to the common search controller
Ctrl[0].setSearchAPI(Ctrl[1]);
},
controller: ['$scope', function($scope){
// you need to design your common search API and
// implement the custom versions of those functions here
// example:
this.getResults = function(query){
// TODO: load the results for company search
};
}]
};
})
.directive('searchJobs', function(){
return {
restrict: 'A',
require: ['search', 'searchJobs'],
link: function(scope, elem, attr, Ctrl){
// here we pass the custom search-jobs controller
// to the common search controller
Ctrl[0].setSearchAPI(Ctrl[1]);
},
controller: ['$scope', function($scope){
// you need to design your common search API and
// implement the custom versions of those functions here
// example:
this.getResults = function(query){
// TODO: load the results for job search
};
}]
};
});
And using it in template would look like:
<search search-companies></search>
and
<search search-jobs></search>
Multiple searches on one directive
This concept could be easily expanded if you need to have one search directive that searches both companies and jobs.
The change would be to turn the search controller's this.api into an array.
angular.module('SearchDemo', [])
.directive('search', function(){
return {
restrict: 'E',
templateUrl: '/templates/search.tpl.html',
controller: ['$scope', function($scope){
$scope.results = [];
// this.api is now an array and can support
// multiple custom search controllers
this.api = [];
this.addSearchAPI = function(searchAPI){
if(this.api.indexOf(searchAPI) == -1){
this.api.push(searchAPI);
}
};
$scope.doSearch = function(query){
$scope.results.length = 0;
// here we call each of the custom controller functions
for(var i=0; i < this.api.length; i++){
var api = this.api[i];
if(angular.isFunction(api.getResults)){
var results = api.getResults(query);
$scope.results.push.apply($scope.results, results);
}
}
};
}]
};
})
.directive('searchCompanies', function(){
return {
restrict: 'A',
require: ['search', 'searchCompanies'],
link: function(scope, elem, attr, Ctrl){
// here we pass the custom search-companies controller
// to the common search controller
Ctrl[0].addSearchAPI(Ctrl[1]);
},
controller: ['$scope', function($scope){
// you need to design your common search API and
// implement the custom versions of those functions here
// example:
this.getResults = function(query){
// TODO: load the results for company search
};
}]
};
})
.directive('searchJobs', function(){
return {
restrict: 'A',
require: ['search', 'searchJobs'],
link: function(scope, elem, attr, Ctrl){
// here we pass the custom search-jobs controller
// to the common search controller
Ctrl[0].addSearchAPI(Ctrl[1]);
},
controller: ['$scope', function($scope){
// you need to design your common search API and
// implement the custom versions of those functions here
// example:
this.getResults = function(query){
// TODO: load the results for job search
};
}]
};
});
And using it in template would look like:
<search search-companies search-jobs></search>
You will have to pass your data source or service to the directive and bind the events from there.
<body ng-app="customSearchDirective">
<div ng-controller="Controller">
<input type="text" placeholder="Search a Company" data-custom-search data-source="companies" />
<input type="text" placeholder="Search for People" data-custom-search data-source="people" />
<hr>
Searching In: {{ searchSource }}
<br/>
Search Result is At: {{ results }}
</div>
</body>
In this sample I am using data-source to pass an array but you can use a service of course.
Then your directive should use the scope attribute to assign what you passed as parameter in source to the scope of the directive.
You will have the input that is using the directive in the elem parameter to bind all the parameters your desire.
(function(angular) {
'use strict';
angular.module('customSearchDirective', [])
.controller('Controller', ['$scope', function($scope) {
$scope.companies = ['Microsoft', 'ID Software', 'Tesla'];
$scope.people = ['Gill Bates', 'Cohn Jarmack', 'Melon Musk'];
$scope.results = [];
$scope.searchSource = [];
}])
.directive('customSearch', [function() {
function link(scope, element, attrs) {
element.on("change", function(e) {
var searchTerm = e.target.value;
scope.$parent.$apply(function() {
scope.$parent.searchSource = scope.source;
scope.$parent.results = scope.source.indexOf(searchTerm);
});
});
}
return {
scope: {
source: '='
},
link: link
};
}]);
})(window.angular);
Using scope.$parent feels a bit hacky I know and limits the use of this directive to be a direct child of the controller but I think it's a good way to get you started.
You can try it out: https://plnkr.co/edit/A3jzjek6hyjK4Btk34Vc?p=preview
Just a couple of notes from the example.
The change event work after you remove focus from the text box (not while you're typing
You will have to search the exact string to get a match
Hope it helps.
i'm trying to display a Bootstrap modal Dialog when a Variable in a Service is changed.
I'm currently doing this with broadcast. I'm new to angular so any help to improve my code is appreciated.
This Code works but i wanted to know if this is the correct way to do this.
My Service:
utils.service('UtilsService', function ($rootScope) {
this.objectToDelete = "";
this.deleteMessage = "";
this.DeleteObject = function (object, message) {
this.objectToDelete = object;
this.deleteMessage = message;
$rootScope.$broadcast('objectChanged', this.objectToDelete);
}
});
My Directive:
verwaltungApp.directive('deletedialog', ['UtilsService', function (UtilsService) {
return {
restrict: 'E',
controller: function ($scope, $attrs, UtilsService) {
$scope.$on("objectChanged", function (event, args) {
if (UtilsService.objectToDelete) {
$scope.ObjectToDelete = UtilsService.objectToDelete;
$scope.Message = UtilsService.deleteMessage;
$('#modalErrorDialog').modal('show');
}
});
$scope.DeleteObject = function () {
$scope.ObjectToDelete.Delete();
$scope.ObjectToDelete = null;
$('#modalErrorDialog').modal('hide');
}
$scope.Cancel = function () {
$scope.ObjectToDelete = null;
$('#modalErrorDialog').modal('hide');
}
},
templateUrl: '/shared/DeleteDialog'
};
}]);
I tried it with $watch before but that did not work for me.
The main thing i want to do is to place this directive on my Layout Page so i can call it from any controller with an object i want to delete.
Hi I am trying to create a laoding box in my angular application here is what I have so far:
This is the loadingBox directive:
app.directive('loadingBoxDir', function (eventsSvc) {
var loadingBoxDir = {
templateUrl: '/Scripts/App/Infrastructure/Directives/loadingBoxView.html',
restrict: "E",
scope: {
isLoadingBoxVisible: '='
}
};
loadingBoxDir.link = function ($scope, $element) {
var loadingBox = $element.find('.fa-spinner');
var body = angular.element('body');
var loadingBoxParent = $element.find('#global-spinner');
loadingBox.css({
"position": "absolute",
"top": body.height() / 2 - loadingBox.height() / 2 + "px",
"left": body.width() / 2 - loadingBox.width() / 2 + "px"
});
$scope.$on(eventsSvc.global.loadingBoxShow, function () {
loadingBoxParent.addClass('global-spinner-visible');
});
$scope.$on(eventsSvc.global.loadingBoxHide, function() {
loadingBoxParent.removeClass('global-spinner-visible');
});
}
return loadingBoxDir;
});
And this is my interceptor:
app.provider('httpInterceptorSvc', [function () {
this.$get = function ($q, $rootScope, $injector, eventsSvc) {
var httpInterceptorSvc = {};
httpInterceptorSvc.request = function (requestParam) {
$rootScope.$broadcast(eventsSvc.global.loadingBoxShow);
return requestParam;
}
httpInterceptorSvc.response = function (responseParam) {
hideLoadingBox();
return responseParam;
}
httpInterceptorSvc.requestError = function (requestErrorParam) {
hideLoadingBox();
return $q.reject(requestErrorParam);
}
httpInterceptorSvc.responseError = function (responseErrorParam) {
hideLoadingBox();
return $q.reject(responseErrorParam);
}
function hideLoadingBox() {
var $http = $injector.get('$http');
if ($http.pendingRequests.length === 0) {
$rootScope.$broadcast(eventsSvc.global.loadingBoxHide);
}
}
return httpInterceptorSvc;
}
}])
This is the events service:
app.factory('eventsSvc', [function () {
var eventsSvc = {
global: {
loadingBoxHide: 'global.loadingBox.hide',
loadingBoxShow: 'global.loadingBox.show'
}
};
return eventsSvc;
}])
Now as you can see in the interceptor in both the request and response I am trying to broadcast to the loadingBoxDir. The problem is that the request broadcast does not reach the directive.
One interesting fact is that the response broadcast reaches the directive and I cannot figure out what is the difference between the two
Can anyone tell me what I am doing wrong?
I figured out the problem with the code.The ideea is that ajax calls get executed as soon as the page loads, but the directives did not have time to be initialized that's why when broadcast gets called it does not reach this on function:
$scope.$on(eventsSvc.global.loadingBoxShow, function () {
loadingBoxParent.addClass('global-spinner-visible');
});
In order to solve the problem I added this piece of code:
loadingBoxParent.addClass('global-spinner-visible');
What this does is sets the loading box visible as soon as the page loads which makes sense because I am executing ajax calls in the controller.
Here is the directive:
directive('cgHasPermissions', ['$animate', '$rootScope', 'PermissionService', 'PERMISSION', '$compile', function ($animate, $rootScope, PermissionService, PERMISSION, $compile) {
return {
multiElement: true,
transclude: 'element',
restrict: 'A',
$$tlb: true,
link: function ($scope, $element, $attr, ctrl, $transclude) {
var block, childScope, previousElements;
var unregister = $scope.$watch('user', function (newValue, oldValue) {
var value = $attr.cgHasPermissions;
var needsPermissions = value || ""
if($rootScope.user && $rootScope.permissions) {
unregister()
}
needsPermissions = value.replace(/\s+/g,"").split(",");
needsPermissions = _.map(needsPermissions, function(perm){
return PERMISSION[perm];
})
var user = $rootScope.user;
if(!needsPermissions || PermissionService.hasPermissions(needsPermissions)){
if (!childScope) {
$transclude (function (clone, newScope) {
childScope = newScope;
clone [clone.length++] = document.createComment (' end cgHasPermissions: ' + $attr.cgHasPermissions + ' ');
block = {
clone: clone
}
$animate.enter(clone, $element.parent (), $element);
});
}
} else {
if (previousElements) {
previousElements.remove();
previousElements = null;
}
if (childScope) {
childScope.$destroy();
childScope = null;
}
if (block) {
previousElements = getBlockNodes (block.clone);
$animate.leave (previousElements).then(function () {
previousElements = null;
});
block = null;
}
}
})
}
};
}])
Here is the HTML
<a ui-sref="addStudentForm" cg-has-permissions="canAddNewStudent,canViewStudent">+</a>
There is no problem in the logic of how the permissions work. I have verified that. whenever I remove the directive form HTML, ui-sref works just fine but when I add my directive, the ui-sref probably doesn't get executed and href attributed is not added at all.
I tried an ng-click, which also doesn't work.
What is in this directive that is not letting other directives get executed ?
What I have done is, take the source code of ng-if and create my own directive with an extra condition of permission check but ng-if does work with other elements what's wrong here ?