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I was wondering if there is a way in angular to conditionally display content other than using ng-show etc. For example in backbone.js I could do something with inline content in a template like:

<% if (myVar === "two") { %> show this<% } %>

but in angular, I seem to be limited to showing and hiding things wrapped in html tags

<p ng-hide="true">I'm hidden</p>
<p ng-show="true">I'm shown</p>

What is the recommended way in angular to conditionally show and hide inline content in angular just using {{}} rather than wrapping the content in html tags?

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3 Answers

up vote 5 down vote accepted

One more answer for this. I'm posting a seperate answer, because it's more of an "exact" attempt at a solution than a list of possible solutions:

Here's a filter that will do an "immediate if" (aka iif):

app.filter('iif', function () {
   return function(input, trueValue, falseValue) {
        return input ? trueValue : falseValue;
   };
});

and would be used like so:

{{foo == "bar" | iif : "it's true" : "no, it's not"}}
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Thank you blesh, this is what I was going for. However I notice that if I try to put an html tag in one of the values it breaks: {{thing.second == "two" | iif : "<ul class='two-class'>" : "<ul>"}} I realize that there may be better ways to do this in angular, but is there a way to escape "<" and ">" so that tags can be output as part of the string? – user1469779 Jan 9 at 21:16
ngBind doesn't allow HTML output, you'd want to use ng-bind-html-unsafe – blesh Jan 9 at 21:41
The example of ng-binf-html-unsafe in the angular documentation uses it within a tag, for example <ANY ng-bind-html-unsafe="{expression}">. it may not be possible to do what I am trying to do inline. – user1469779 Jan 10 at 15:18
I've honestly not tried that. To me something feels wrong about writing out HTML in that manner. But I don't know your specific use case. – blesh Jan 10 at 15:24
i like this answer – whiteb0x Mar 1 at 3:05

Thousands of ways to skin this cat. I realize you're asking about between {{}} speifically, but for others that come here, I think it's worth showing some of the other options.

function on your $scope (IMO, this is your best bet in most scenarios):

  app.controller('MyCtrl', function($scope) {
      $scope.foo = 1;

      $scope.showSomething = function(input) {
           return input == 1 ? 'Foo' : 'Bar';
      };
   });

 <span>{{showSomething(foo)}}</span>

ng-show and ng-hide of course:

 <span ng-show="foo == 1">Foo</span><span ng-hide="foo == 1">Bar</span>

ngSwitch

 <div ng-switch on="foo">
   <span ng-switch-when="1">Foo</span>
   <span ng-switch-when="2">Bar</span>
   <span ng-switch-default>What?</span>
 </div>

A custom filter as Bertrand suggested. (this is your best choice if you have to do the same thing over and over)

app.filter('myFilter', function() {
   return function(input) {
     return input == 1 ? 'Foo' : 'Bar';
   }
}

{{foo | myFilter}}

Or A custom directive:

app.directive('myDirective', function() {
   return {
     restrict: 'E',
     replace: true,
     link: function(scope, elem, attrs) {
       scope.$watch(attrs.value, function(v) {
          elem.text(v == 1 ? 'Foo': 'Bar');
       });
     }
   };
});


<my-directive value="foo"></my-directive>

Personally, in most cases I'd go with a function on my scope, it keeps the markup pretty clean, and it's quick and easy to implement. Unless, that is, you're going to be doing the same exact thing over and over again, in which case I'd go with Bertrand's suggestion and create a filter or possibly a directive, depending on the circumstances.

As always, the most important thing is that your solution is easy to maintain, and is hopefully testable. And that is going to depend completely on your specific situation.

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If I understood you well I think you have two ways of doing it.

First you could try ngSwitch and the second possible way would be creating you own filter. Probably ngSwitch is the right aproach but if you want to hide or show inline content just using {{}} filter is the way to go.

Here is a fiddle with a simple filter as an example.

<div ng-app="exapleOfFilter">
  <div ng-controller="Ctrl">
    <input ng-model="greeting" type="greeting">
      <br><br>
      <h1>{{greeting|isHello}}</h1>
  </div>
</div>

angular.module('exapleOfFilter', []).
  filter('isHello', function() {
    return function(input) {
      // conditional you want to apply
      if (input === 'hello') {
        return input;
      }
      return '';
    }
  });

function Ctrl($scope) {
  $scope.greeting = 'hello';
}
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