2

I've new to AngularJS and is stuck wondering about the best way to approach the following situation:

1. I need to show rows of data for the last 30 days. (default option)

How I'm doing it: When the page loads, the Spring controller puts the list in the model attribute.

@RequestMapping(value="/show/data", method = RequestMethod.GET)
    public String getDataPage(ModelMap model) {
        //cropped for brevity
        List<Data> dataList = dataService.getData(fromDate, toDate);
        model.addAttribute("dataList ", dataList );

        return "data-page";
    }

And in the JSP I'm using EL tags to loop through the List and show user the data in tabular form

<c:forEach var="currentData" items="${dataList}">
    <tr>
        <td>${currentData.name}</td>
        <td>${currentData.address}</td>
        <td>${currentData.email}</td>
        <td>${currentData.phone}</td>
    </tr>
</c:forEach>
  1. The user has an option to select the date range & depending on the range selected(e.g. today, yesterday, last week, last month, custom range), the data shown should update.

How I'm doing it: I'm using Bootstrap-Daterangepicker (https://github.com/dangrossman/bootstrap-daterangepicker) to show the markup. It provides me a callback function.

$('#reportrange').daterangepicker(options, callback);

e.g. $('#reportrange').daterangepicker(options, function(startDate, endDate){});

Without AngularJS, this is going to be messy. I can call jQuery ajax and then fetch a list, then mess around with the DOM elements from within jQuery. But this is messy.

How can I include AngularJS in this scenario to make my life easier. (and the code a lot less cleaner) Please help. I'm stuck.

2 Answers 2

6

You must use Angular $http service. For even better abstraction, you should go with $resource service.

var mod = angular.module('my-app', ['ngResource']);

function Controller($scope, $resource) {
  var User = $resource('http://serveraddress/users?from=:from&to=:to', null, {
      getAll: {method: 'JSONP', isArray: true}
    });

  $scope.changeDate = function(fromDate, toDate) {
    $scope.users = User.getAll({from: fromDate, to: toDate});
  };

  $scope.users = User.getAll();
}
<html ng-app="my-app">
<div ng-controller="Controller">
  <input type="text" my-date-picker="changeDate($startDate, $endDate)" />
  <table>
    <tr ng-repeat="user in users">
      <td>{{user.name}}</td>
      <td>{{user.address}}</td>
    </tr>
  </table>
</div>
</html>

To accomodate the DateSelector, you wish to create a directive to encapsulate its requirements. The simplest one would be:

mod.directive('myDatePicker', function () {
    return {
    restrict: 'A',
        link: function (scope, element, attr) {
            $(element).daterangepicker({}, function (startDate, endDate) {
                scope.$eval(attr.myDatePicker, {$startDate: startDate, $endDate: endDate});
            });
        }
    };
});

No need to worry with synchronism. As $resource is based on promises, it will be automagically bound when data is ready.

6
  • Ok, this sounds feasible. So you mean to say: I don't render the view using EL tags(as shown in the example above) and even in the first time load(for last 30 days range) I use AngularJS to fill up the data for me using handlebars. That's cool. Ok. Now the 2nd part of the problem is: I've got a date range picker library that lets the user select a date range and that should again invoke the Angular Controller somehow, so that the view is updated. Any ideas? Mar 1, 2013 at 13:24
  • Does the data must be called again from server with the new parameters or is this a client side filter?
    – Caio Cunha
    Mar 1, 2013 at 13:36
  • The data must be fetched again from the server. The range selection library provides a callback function when the range is selected by the user. What about we explicitly call $resource in that function? Will it work? Or do you have a neater solution? Mar 1, 2013 at 13:41
  • Wow, this looks neat. Any idea why I'm getting "SyntaxError: missing ; before statement $scope.changeDate(fromDate, toDate) { Mar 1, 2013 at 15:21
  • Sorry, my bad. Fixed the example. The right is $scope.changeDate = function(fromDate...
    – Caio Cunha
    Mar 1, 2013 at 15:28
1

you should do something like this:

SpringMVC Controller:

@RequestMapping(value="/load/{page}", method = RequestMethod.POST)  
public @ResponseBody String getCars(@PathVariable int page){  
            //remember that toString() has been overridden  
            return cars.getSubList(page*NUM_CARS, (page+1)*NUM_CARS).toString();  
}  

AngularJS Controller:

function carsCtrl($scope, $http){  
    //when the user enters in the site the 3 cars are loaded through SpringMVC  
    //by default AngularJS cars is empty  
    $scope.cars = [];  

    //that is the way for bindding 'click' event to a AngularJS function  
    //javascript cannot know the context, so we give it as a parameter  
    $scope.load = function(context){  
       //Asynchronous request, if you know jQuery, this one works like $.ajax  
       $http({  
              url: context+'/load/'+page,  
              method: "POST",  
              headers: {'Content-Type': 'application/x-www-form-urlencoded'}  
       }).success(function (data, status, headers, config) {  
              //data contains the model which is send it by the Spring controller in JSON format  
              //$scope.cars.push is the way to add new cars into $scope.cars array  
              for(i=0; i< data.carList.length; i++)  
                 $scope.cars.push(data.carList[i]);  

              page++; //updating the page  
              page%=5; //our bean contains 15 cars, 3 cars par page = 5 pages, so page 5=0  

        }).error(function (data, status, headers, config) {  
              alert(status);  
        });             
    }  
} 

View

<!-- Activating AngularJS in the entire document-->  
<html ng-app>  
    <head>  
        <!-- Adding AngularJS and our controller -->  
        <title>Luigi's world MVC bananas</title>  
        <link href="css/style.css" rel="stylesheet">  
        <script src="//ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/angularjs/1.2.4/angular.min.js"></script>  
        <script src="js/controller.js"></script><!-- our controller -->  
    </head>  
    <!-- Activating carsCtrl in the body -->  
    <body ng-controller="carsCtrl">  

         <div class="carsFrame">  

               <!-- AngularJS manages cars injection after have loaded the 3 first-->  
               <!-- We use ng-src instead src because src doesn't work in elements generated by AngularJS  -->  
               <div ng-repeat="car in cars" class="carsFrame">  
                   <img ng-src="{{car.src}}"/>  
                   <h1>{{car.name}}</h1>  
               </div>  
         </div>  

         <div id="button_container">  
               <!-- ng-click binds click event with AngularJS' $scope-->  
               <!-- Load function is implemented in the controller -->  
               <!-- As I said in the controller javascript cannot know the context, so we give it as a parameter-->  
               <button type="button" class="btn btn-xlarge btn-primary" ng-click="load('${pageContext.request.contextPath}')">3 more...</button>  
         </div>  
    </body>  
</html> 

The complete example is here

0

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.