311

If I have a navbar in bootstrap with the items

Home | About | Contact

How do I set the active class for each menu item when they are active? That is, how can I set class="active" when the angular route is at

  1. #/ for home
  2. #/about for the about page
  3. #/contact for the contact page
4

26 Answers 26

598

A very elegant way is to use ng-controller to run a single controller outside of the ng-view:

<div class="collapse navbar-collapse" ng-controller="HeaderController">
    <ul class="nav navbar-nav">
        <li ng-class="{ active: isActive('/')}"><a href="/">Home</a></li>
        <li ng-class="{ active: isActive('/dogs')}"><a href="/dogs">Dogs</a></li>
        <li ng-class="{ active: isActive('/cats')}"><a href="/cats">Cats</a></li>
    </ul>
</div>
<div ng-view></div>

and include in controllers.js:

function HeaderController($scope, $location) 
{ 
    $scope.isActive = function (viewLocation) { 
        return viewLocation === $location.path();
    };
}
23
  • 10
    Since I am new to this I would appreciate if you could provide an example on how to put this into a header directive, please.
    – mono68
    Sep 20, 2013 at 14:53
  • 41
    I would suggest using return $location.path().indexOf(viewLocation) == 0; instead so you can catch pages with parameters as well
    – Sven Hecht
    Jul 8, 2014 at 20:09
  • 7
    This gets the job done but its hardly elegant - the route name eg /dogs has to be duplicated in the call to isActive('/dogs')
    – wal
    Nov 16, 2014 at 5:09
  • 7
    If you are using UI Router, then you can use the ui-sref-active/ui-sref-active-eq directives, ie. ui-sref-active-eq='active' or ui-sref-active='active' to achieve the same results
    – Dan
    Apr 14, 2015 at 10:48
  • 10
    @SvenHecht The concern with that logic is that a home page link (/) would match every other path.
    – mwotton
    Apr 28, 2015 at 5:44
51

I just wrote a directive to handle this, so you can simply add the attribute bs-active-link to the parent <ul> element, and any time the route changed, it will find the matching link, and add the active class to the corresponding <li>.

You can see it in action here: http://jsfiddle.net/8mcedv3b/

Example HTML:

<ul class="nav navbar-nav" bs-active-link>
  <li><a href="/home">Home</a></li>
  <li><a href="/contact">Contact</a></li>
</ul>

Javascript:

angular.module('appName')
.directive('bsActiveLink', ['$location', function ($location) {
return {
    restrict: 'A', //use as attribute 
    replace: false,
    link: function (scope, elem) {
        //after the route has changed
        scope.$on("$routeChangeSuccess", function () {
            var hrefs = ['/#' + $location.path(),
                         '#' + $location.path(), //html5: false
                         $location.path()]; //html5: true
            angular.forEach(elem.find('a'), function (a) {
                a = angular.element(a);
                if (-1 !== hrefs.indexOf(a.attr('href'))) {
                    a.parent().addClass('active');
                } else {
                    a.parent().removeClass('active');   
                };
            });     
        });
    }
}
}]);
3
  • 1
    i like this better than the accepted answer because there's no duplication of config data, i.e. the routes themselves remain in just one place and this just works.. Nov 7, 2015 at 1:47
  • 1
    worked for me using scope.$watch("$routeChangeSuccess", function () { .... instead of scope.$on("$routeChangeSuccess", function () {....
    – aemad
    Jan 5, 2016 at 22:15
  • Had to tweak this a little bit for my own purposes, but awesome answer! Easy enough to understand. Jun 21, 2016 at 0:01
38

You can have a look at AngularStrap, the navbar directive seems to be what you are looking for:

https://github.com/mgcrea/angular-strap/blob/master/src/navbar/navbar.js

.directive('bsNavbar', function($location) {
  'use strict';

  return {
    restrict: 'A',
    link: function postLink(scope, element, attrs, controller) {
      // Watch for the $location
      scope.$watch(function() {
        return $location.path();
      }, function(newValue, oldValue) {

        $('li[data-match-route]', element).each(function(k, li) {
          var $li = angular.element(li),
            // data('match-rout') does not work with dynamic attributes
            pattern = $li.attr('data-match-route'),
            regexp = new RegExp('^' + pattern + '$', ['i']);

          if(regexp.test(newValue)) {
            $li.addClass('active');
          } else {
            $li.removeClass('active');
          }

        });
      });
    }
  };
});

To use this directive:

  1. Download AngularStrap from http://mgcrea.github.io/angular-strap/

  2. Include the script on your page after bootstrap.js:
    <script src="lib/angular-strap.js"></script>

  3. Add the directives to your module:
    angular.module('myApp', ['$strap.directives'])

  4. Add the directive to your navbar:
    <div class="navbar" bs-navbar>

  5. Add regexes on each nav item:
    <li data-match-route="/about"><a href="#/about">About</a></li>

4
  • 1
    Thanks. This helped me fix my own directive ( the missing insight for me was the scope.$watch ) Jul 15, 2013 at 15:33
  • Why is the element variable passed to the jquery selector? $('...', element)
    – Lucio
    Oct 4, 2014 at 18:55
  • @Lucio the method takes 2 arguments - jQuery(selector, context) -- the second argument is to pass context of the selector, either parent DOM element or another jQuery object itself - read more here
    – CoderTR
    Jan 27, 2015 at 20:05
  • This works perfectly for me - I had to make one change however, per mgcrea.github.io/angular-strap the directive to add to your module is mgcrea.ngStrap not $strap.directives
    – Vixxd
    Jan 5, 2016 at 15:00
33

Here's a simple approach that works well with Angular.

<ul class="nav navbar-nav">
    <li ng-class="{ active: isActive('/View1') }"><a href="#/View1">View 1</a></li>
    <li ng-class="{ active: isActive('/View2') }"><a href="#/View2">View 2</a></li>
    <li ng-class="{ active: isActive('/View3') }"><a href="#/View3">View 3</a></li>
</ul>

Within your AngularJS controller:

$scope.isActive = function (viewLocation) {
     var active = (viewLocation === $location.path());
     return active;
};
2
  • 2
    Nice approach. I modified it little bit - used ng-class directive(ng-class={active: isActive('/View1')}) and updated the isActive function to return true/false instead of class name itself.
    – patelsan
    Aug 28, 2013 at 11:50
  • I have copied everything like your example, and for me $location.path() did not worked... switched to $location.url(), and it worked! Nov 13, 2014 at 15:46
16

If you are working with Angular router, the RouterLinkActive directive can be used really elegantly:

<ul class="navbar-nav">
  <li class="nav-item"><a class="nav-link" routerLink="home" routerLinkActive="active">Home</a></li>
  <li class="nav-item"><a class="nav-link" routerLink="gallery" routerLinkActive="active">Gallery</a></li>
  <li class="nav-item"><a class="nav-link" routerLink="pricing" routerLinkActive="active">Prices</a></li>
  <li class="nav-item"><a class="nav-link" routerLink="contact" routerLinkActive="active">Contact</a></li>
</ul>
2
  • 2
    I think this should be the accepted answer (for angular 2+ at least), why implement something is already implemented? But for Bootstrap 3.3 the active class should be in the <li> (you can put the routerLinkActive with the routerLink or its parent)
    – PhoneixS
    Feb 12, 2018 at 17:21
  • 3
    Note: if you use / as your home page, routerLinkActive will consider that active for any URL beginning with /, e.g. /foo/, /foo/bar etc. To match exactly, you need routerLinkActive="active" [routerLinkActiveOptions]="{exact:true}". Feb 25, 2018 at 6:47
8

First and foremost, this problem can be solved in a lot of ways. This way might not be the most elegant, but it cerntainly works.

Here is a simple solution you should be able to add to any project. You can just add a "pageKey" or some other property when you configure your route that you can use to key off of. Additionally, you can implement a listener on the $routeChangeSuccess method of the $route object to listen for the successful completion of a route change.

When your handler fires you get the page key, and use that key to locate elements that need to be "ACTIVE" for this page, and you apply the ACTIVE class.

Keep in mind you need a way to make ALL the elements "IN ACTIVE". As you can see i'm using the .pageKey class on my nav items to turn them all off, and I'm using the .pageKey_{PAGEKEY} to individually turn them on. Switching them all to inactive, would be considered a naive approach, potentially you'd get better performance by using the previous route to make only active items inactive, or you could alter the jquery selector to only select active items to be made inactive. Using jquery to select all active items is probably the best solution because it ensures everything is cleaned up for the current route in case of any css bugs that might have been present on the previous route.

Which would mean changing this line of code:

$(".pagekey").toggleClass("active", false);

to this one

$(".active").toggleClass("active", false);

Here is some sample code:

Given a bootstrap navbar of

<div class="navbar navbar-inverse">
    <div class="navbar-inner">
        <a class="brand" href="#">Title</a>
        <ul class="nav">
            <li><a href="#!/" class="pagekey pagekey_HOME">Home</a></li>
            <li><a href="#!/page1/create" class="pagekey pagekey_CREATE">Page 1 Create</a></li>
            <li><a href="#!/page1/edit/1" class="pagekey pagekey_EDIT">Page 1 Edit</a></li>
            <li><a href="#!/page1/published/1" class="pagekey pagekey_PUBLISH">Page 1 Published</a></li>
        </ul>
    </div>
</div>

And an angular module and controller like the following:

<script type="text/javascript">

    function Ctrl($scope, $http, $routeParams, $location, $route) {

    }



    angular.module('BookingFormBuilder', []).
        config(function ($routeProvider, $locationProvider) {
            $routeProvider.
                when('/', { 
                   template: 'I\'m on the home page', 
                   controller: Ctrl, 
                   pageKey: 'HOME' }).
                when('/page1/create', { 
                   template: 'I\'m on page 1 create', 
                   controller: Ctrl, 
                   pageKey: 'CREATE' }).
                when('/page1/edit/:id', { 
                   template: 'I\'m on page 1 edit {id}', 
                   controller: Ctrl, pageKey: 'EDIT' }).
                when('/page1/published/:id', { 
                   template: 'I\'m on page 1 publish {id}', 
                   controller: Ctrl, pageKey: 'PUBLISH' }).
                otherwise({ redirectTo: '/' });

            $locationProvider.hashPrefix("!");
        }).run(function ($rootScope, $http, $route) {

            $rootScope.$on("$routeChangeSuccess", 
                           function (angularEvent, 
                                     currentRoute,
                                     previousRoute) {

                var pageKey = currentRoute.pageKey;
                $(".pagekey").toggleClass("active", false);
                $(".pagekey_" + pageKey).toggleClass("active", true);
            });

        });

</script>
3
  • You need to scroll to the right to see the pageKey values on the routes, that's the key to this whole solution. Apr 24, 2013 at 21:32
  • 16
    This may work, but is against the general advice for Angular.js apps: in Angular you should refrain from messing with the DOM using jQuery; if you have to touch the DOM, write a directive. Jun 3, 2013 at 22:17
  • this is perfect, if the dom manipulation bothers you, just add a directive on the .navbar, add a $broadcast event in routechangesuccess, $rootScope.$broadcast('routeChanged', current.pageKey); and then capture it on your directive and do the dom manipulations there
    – Irshu
    Dec 15, 2014 at 7:18
7

You can actually use angular-ui-utils' ui-route directive:

<a ui-route ng-href="/">Home</a>
<a ui-route ng-href="/about">About</a>
<a ui-route ng-href="/contact">Contact</a>

or:

Header Controller

/**
 * Header controller
 */
angular.module('myApp')
  .controller('HeaderCtrl', function ($scope) {
    $scope.menuItems = [
      {
        name: 'Home',
        url:  '/',
        title: 'Go to homepage.'
      },
      {
        name:   'About',
        url:    '/about',
        title:  'Learn about the project.'
      },
      {
        name:   'Contact',
        url:    '/contact',
        title:  'Contact us.'
      }
    ];
  });

Index page

<!-- index.html: -->
<div class="header" ng-controller="HeaderCtrl">
  <ul class="nav navbar-nav navbar-right">
    <li ui-route="{{menuItem.url}}" ng-class="{active: $uiRoute}"
      ng-repeat="menuItem in menuItems">
      <a ng-href="#{{menuItem.url}}" title="{{menuItem.title}}">
        {{menuItem.name}}
      </a>
    </li>
  </ul>
</div>

If you're using ui-utils, you may also be interested in ui-router for managing partial/nested views.

2
  • The ui-route approach is very seducing but so far I didn't manage to make it work on the project generated by Yeoman's angular generator.
    – gabuzo
    Sep 17, 2014 at 10:01
  • @gabuzo: Did you install angular-ui-utils via bower? Sep 17, 2014 at 16:03
6

I find all of these answers a bit over complicated for me, sorry. So I have created a small directive that should work on a per navbar basis:

app.directive('activeLink', function () {
    return {
        link: function (scope, element, attrs) {
            element.find('.nav a').on('click', function () {
                angular.element(this)
                    .parent().siblings('.active')
                    .removeClass('active');
                angular.element(this)
                    .parent()
                    .addClass('active');
            });
        }
    };
});

Usage:

<ul class="nav navbar-nav navbar-right" active-link>
    <li class="nav active"><a href="home">Home</a></li>
    <li class="nav"><a href="foo">Foo</a></li>
    <li class="nav"><a href="bar">Bar</a></li>
</ul>
1
  • Your method works only after you click a link in the nav bar. If you start on a URL that is "Foo", "Home" will initially be selected still. e.g. starting on localhost:9000/#/contact causes the Home to appear selected in the nav bar. May 23, 2016 at 0:55
5

I use ng-class directive with $location to achieve it.

<ul class="nav">
<li data-ng-class="{active: ($location.path() == '/') }">
    <a href="#/">Carpeta Amarilla</a>
</li>
<li class="dropdown" data-ng-class="{active: ($location.path() == '/auditoria' || $location.path() == '/auditoria/todos') }">
    <a class="dropdown-toggle" data-toggle="dropdown" href="#">
        Auditoria
        <b class="caret"></b>
    </a>
    <ul class="dropdown-menu pull-right">
        <li data-ng-class="{active: ($location.path() == '/auditoria') }">
            <a href="#/auditoria">Por Legajo</a>
        </li>
        <li data-ng-class="{active: ($location.path() == '/auditoria/todos') }">
            <a href="#/auditoria/todos">General</a>
        </li>
    </ul>
</li>
</ul>

It requires the navbar to be inside a main Controller with access to $location service like this:

bajasApp.controller('MenuCntl', ['$scope','$route', '$routeParams', '$location', 
   function MenuCntl($scope, $route, $routeParams, $location) {
   $scope.$route = $route;
   $scope.$location = $location;
   $scope.$routeParams = $routeParams;
}]);
0
4

If you use ui-router, the following example should satisfy your needs based on @DanPantry's comment on the accepted answer without adding any controller-side code:

<div class="collapse navbar-collapse" ng-controller="HeaderController">
    <ul class="nav navbar-nav">
        <li ui-sref-active="active"><a ui-sref="app.home()" href="/">Home</a></li>
        <li ui-sref-active="active"><a ui-sref="app.dogs()" href="/dogs">Dogs</a></li>
        <li ui-sref-active="active"><a ui-sref="app.cats()" href="/cats">Cats</a></li>
    </ul>
</div>
<div ng-view></div>

You can check the docs for more info on it.

2
  • perfect! surely the cleanest solution Jul 1, 2017 at 17:21
  • quite simply the best solution going. who doesn't use ui.router!
    – dewd
    Oct 30, 2017 at 14:23
3

You can achieve this with a conditional in an angular expression, such as:

<a href="#" class="{{ condition ? 'active' : '' }}">link</a>

That being said, I do find an angular directive to be the more "proper" way of doing it, even though outsourcing a lot of this mini-logic can somewhat pollute your code base.

I use conditionals for GUI styling every once in a while during development, because it's a little quicker than creating directives. I couldn't tell you an instance though in which they actually remained in the code base for long. In the end I either turn it into a directive or find a better way to solve the problem.

3

If you would rather not use AngularStrap then this directive should do the trick!. This is a modification of https://stackoverflow.com/a/16231859/910764.

JavaScript

angular.module('myApp').directive('bsNavbar', ['$location', function ($location) {
  return {
    restrict: 'A',
    link: function postLink(scope, element) {
      scope.$watch(function () {
        return $location.path();
      }, function (path) {
        angular.forEach(element.children(), (function (li) {
          var $li = angular.element(li),
            regex = new RegExp('^' + $li.attr('data-match-route') + '$', 'i'),
            isActive = regex.test(path);
          $li.toggleClass('active', isActive);
        }));
      });
    }
  };
}]);

HTML

<ul class="nav navbar-nav" bs-navbar>
  <li data-match-route="/home"><a href="#/home">Home</a></li>
  <li data-match-route="/about"><a href="#/about">About</a></li>
</ul>

Note: The above HTML classes assume you are using Bootstrap 3.x

3

Heres my take on it. A little of a combination of answers found on this post. I had a slightly different case, so my solution involves separating the menu into its own template to be used within the Directive Definition Ojbect then add my navbar to the page I needed it on. Basically, I had a login page that I didnt want to include my menu on, so I used ngInclude and insert this directive when logged in:

DIRECTIVE:

module.directive('compModal', function(){


return {
    restrict: 'E',
    replace: true,
    transclude: true,
    scope: true,
    templateUrl: 'templates/menu.html',
    controller: function($scope, $element, $location){
        $scope.isActive = function(viewLocation){

            var active = false;

            if(viewLocation === $location.path()){
                active = true;
            }

            return active;

        }
    }
 }
});

DIRECTIVE TEMPLATE (templates/menu.html)

<ul class="nav navbar-nav">
  <li ng-class="{ active: isActive('/View1') }"><a href="#/View1">View 1</a></li>
  <li ng-class="{ active: isActive('/View2') }"><a href="#/View2">View 2</a></li>
  <li ng-class="{ active: isActive('/View3') }"><a href="#/View3">View 3</a></li>
</ul>

HTML WHICH INCLUDES THE DIRECTIVE

<comp-navbar/>

Hope this helps

1
  • 1
    The function can be shortened to just $scope.isActive = function (viewLocation) { return viewLocation === $location.path(); }; Apr 29, 2015 at 18:07
2

Extending myl answer, I needed this to handle an structure like this.

-index

-events<-active
---event-list
---event-edit
---event-map <-clicked

-places
---place-list
---place-edit
---place-map

so instead of matching, I had to use indexOf, in order to validate children links which are formatted to match the condition. So for 'events':

<li ng-class="{ active: isActive('/event')}" class="divider-vertical dropdown">


function NavController($scope, $location) { 
$scope.isActive = function (viewLocation) {
    var s=false;
    if($location.path().indexOf(viewLocation) != -1){
     s = true;
    }
    return s;
};}
2

This is a simple solution

<ul class="nav navbar-nav navbar-right navbar-default menu">
  <li ng-class="menuIndice == 1 ? 'active':''">
    <a ng-click="menuIndice = 1" href="#/item1">item1</a>
  </li>
  <li ng-class="menuIndice == 2 ? 'active':''">
    <a ng-click="menuIndice = 2" href="#/item2">item2</a>
  </li>
  <li ng-class="menuIndice == 3 ? 'active':''">
    <a ng-click="menuIndice = 3" href="#/item3">item3</a>
  </li>
</ul>
2

Use an object as a switch variable.
You can do this inline quite simply with:

<ul class="nav navbar-nav">
   <li ng-class="{'active':switch.linkOne}" ng-click="switch = {linkOne: true}"><a href="/">Link One</a></li>
   <li ng-class="{'active':switch.linkTwo}" ng-click="switch = {link-two: true}"><a href="/link-two">Link Two</a></li>
</ul>

Each time you click on a link the switch object is replaced by a new object where only the correct switch object property is true. The undefined properties will evaluate as false and so the elements which depend on them will not have the active class assigned.

1

In conjunction with @Olivier's AngularStrap answer, I also implemented kevinknelson's answer from: https://github.com/twbs/bootstrap/issues/9013.

Natively, the Bootstrap3 navbar was not designed for a single-page (eg Angular) application and thus the menu when on a small screen was not collapsing upon click.

1

JavaScript

/**
 * Main AngularJS Web Application
 */

var app = angular.module('yourWebApp', [
    'ngRoute'
]);


/**
 * Setup Main Menu
 */

app.controller('MainNavCtrl', [ '$scope', '$location', function ( $scope, $location) {
    $scope.menuItems = [
        {
            name: 'Home',
            url:  '/home',
            title: 'Welcome to our Website'
        },
        {
            name: 'ABOUT',
            url:  '/about',
            title: 'Know about our work culture'
        },
        {
            name:   'CONTACT',
            url:    '/contact',
            title:  'Get in touch with us'
        }
    ];

    $scope.isActive = function (viewLocation) {
        return viewLocation === $location.path();
    };
}]);

HTML

  <div class="navbar-collapse collapse" ng-controller="MainNavCtrl">
    <ul id="add-magic-line" class="nav navbar-nav navbar-right">
      <li data-ng-class="{current_page_item: isActive('{{ menuItem.url }}')}" data-ng-repeat="menuItem in menuItems">
        <a data-ng-href="#{{menuItem.url}}" title="{{menuItem.title}}">
          {{menuItem.name}}
        </a>
      </li>
    </ul>
  </div>
1
  • This does not work - it does not add the current class to the DOM Oct 18, 2015 at 13:02
1

Thanks to @Pylinux. I have used his technique and also modified it to support "one" level of drop down menu (sub ul/li), as that is what I needed. See it in action in the fiddle link below.

Updated Fiddle based on pylinux's answer - http://jsfiddle.net/abhatia/en4qxw6g/

I made the following three changes, in order to support one level drop down menu:
1. Added a class value of dd (dropdown) for "a" element under li which needs to have sub ul list.

         <li><a class="dd">This link points to #/fun5</a>
          <ul>
            <li><a href="#/fun6?some=data">This link points to #/fun6</a>
            </li>
            <li><a href="#/fun7?some=data">This link points to #/fun7</a>
            </li>
            <li><a href="#/fun8?some=data">This link points to #/fun8</a>
            </li>
            <li><a href="#/fun9?some=data">This link points to #/fun9</a>
            </li>
          </ul>
        </li>


2. Updated Javascript to add the following new logic.

 if(angular.element(li).parent().parent().children('a').hasClass("dd"))
 {angular.element(li).parent().parent().children('a.dd').addClass('active');}


3. Updated CSS to the add the following:

a.active {background-color:red;}

Hopefully this will be helpful to someone looking to implement single level dropdown menu.

0

You can also use this active-link directive https://stackoverflow.com/a/23138152/1387163

Parent li will get active class when location matches /url:

<li>
    <a href="#!/url" active-link active-link-parent>
</li>
0

I suggest using a directive on a link. Here is the fiddle.

But its not perfect yet. Watch out for the hashbangs ;)

Here is the javascript for directive:

angular.module('link', []).
  directive('activeLink', ['$location', function(location) {
    return {
      restrict: 'A',
      link: function(scope, element, attrs, controller) {
        var clazz = attrs.activeLink;
        var path = attrs.href;
        path = path.substring(1); //hack because path does not return including hashbang
        scope.location = location;
        scope.$watch('location.path()', function(newPath) {
          if (path === newPath) {
            element.addClass(clazz);
          } else {
            element.removeClass(clazz);
          }
        });
      }
    };
  }]);

and here is how it would be used in html:

<div ng-app="link">
  <a href="#/one" active-link="active">One</a>
  <a href="#/two" active-link="active">One</a>
  <a href="#" active-link="active">home</a>
</div>

afterwards styling with css:

.active{ color:red; }
0

Just to add my two cents in the debate I have made a pure angular module (no jquery), and it will also work with hash urls containing data. (i.g. #/this/is/path?this=is&some=data)

You just add the module as a dependency and auto-active to one of the ancestors of the menu. Like this:

<ul auto-active>
    <li><a href="#/">main</a></li>
    <li><a href="#/first">first</a></li>
    <li><a href="#/second">second</a></li>
    <li><a href="#/third">third</a></li>
</ul>

And the module look like this:

(function () {
    angular.module('autoActive', [])
        .directive('autoActive', ['$location', function ($location) {
        return {
            restrict: 'A',
            scope: false,
            link: function (scope, element) {
                function setActive() {
                    var path = $location.path();
                    if (path) {
                        angular.forEach(element.find('li'), function (li) {
                            var anchor = li.querySelector('a');
                            if (anchor.href.match('#' + path + '(?=\\?|$)')) {
                                angular.element(li).addClass('active');
                            } else {
                                angular.element(li).removeClass('active');
                            }
                        });
                    }
                }

                setActive();

                scope.$on('$locationChangeSuccess', setActive);
            }
        }
    }]);
}());

* (You can of course just use the directive part)

** It's also worth noticing that this doesn't work for empty hashes (i.g. example.com/# or just example.com) it needs to have at least example.com/#/ or just example.com#/. But this happens automatically with ngResource and the like.

1
  • That is just nasty. Reason to use Angular is for simplicity. Jun 9, 2015 at 21:23
0

This did the trick for me:

  var domain = '{{ DOMAIN }}'; // www.example.com or dev.example.com
  var domain_index =  window.location.href.indexOf(domain);
  var long_app_name = window.location.href.slice(domain_index+domain.length+1); 
  // this turns http://www.example.com/whatever/whatever to whatever/whatever
  app_name = long_app_name.slice(0, long_app_name.indexOf('/')); 
  //now you are left off with just the first whatever which is usually your app name

then you use jquery(works with angular too) to add class active

$('nav a[href*="' + app_name+'"]').closest('li').addClass('active');

and of course the css:

.active{background:red;}

this works if you have your html like this:

<ul><li><a href="/ee">ee</a></li><li><a href="/dd">dd</a></li></ul>

this will atumatically add class active using the page url and color your background to red if your in www.somesite.com/ee thaen ee is the 'app' and it will be active

0

This is long answered but I thought I'd share my way:

.run(function($rootScope, $state){
 $rootScope.$state = $state;
});

Template:

<ul class="nav navbar-nav">
    <li ng-class="{ active: $state.contains('View1') }"><a href="...">View 1</a></li>
    <li ng-class="{ active: $state.contains('View2') }"><a href="...">View 2</a></li>
    <li ng-class="{ active: $state.contains('View3') }"><a href="...">View 3</a></li>
</ul>

For those using ui-router:

<ul class="nav navbar-nav">
        <li ui-sref-active="active"><a href="...">View 1</a></li>
        <li ui-sref-active="active"><a href="...">View 2</a></li>
        <li ui-sref-active="active"><a href="...">View 3</a></li>
</ul>

For exact match (eg nested states?) use $state.name === 'full/path/to/state' or ui-sref-active-eq="active"

0

Here's another solution for anyone who might be interested. The advantage of this is it has fewer dependencies. Heck, it works without a web server too. So it's completely client-side.

HTML:

<nav class="navbar navbar-inverse" ng-controller="topNavBarCtrl"">
<div class="container-fluid">
    <div class="navbar-header">
        <a class="navbar-brand" href="#"><span class="glyphicon glyphicon-home" aria-hidden="true"></span></a>
    </div>
    <ul class="nav navbar-nav">
        <li ng-click="selectTab()" ng-class="getTabClass()"><a href="#">Home</a></li>
        <li ng-repeat="tab in tabs" ng-click="selectTab(tab)" ng-class="getTabClass(tab)"><a href="#">{{ tab }}</a></li>
    </ul>
</div>

Explanation:

Here we are generating the links dynamically from an angularjs model using the directive ng-repeat. Magic happens with the methods selectTab() and getTabClass() defined in the controller for this navbar presented below.

Controller:

angular.module("app.NavigationControllersModule", [])

// Constant named 'activeTab' holding the value 'active'. We will use this to set the class name of the <li> element that is selected.
.constant("activeTab", "active")

.controller("topNavBarCtrl", function($scope, activeTab){
    // Model used for the ng-repeat directive in the template.
    $scope.tabs = ["Page 1", "Page 2", "Page 3"];

    var selectedTab = null;

    // Sets the selectedTab.
    $scope.selectTab = function(newTab){
       selectedTab = newTab;
    };

    // Sets class of the selectedTab to 'active'.
    $scope.getTabClass = function(tab){
       return selectedTab == tab ? activeTab : "";
    };
});

Explanation:

selectTab() method is called using ng-click directive. So when the link is clicked, the variable selectedTab is set to the name of this link. In the HTML you can see that this method is called without any argument for Home tab so that it will be highlighted when the page loads.

The getTabClass() method is called via ng-class directive in the HTML. This method checks if the tab it is in is the same as the value of the selectedTab variable. If true, it returns "active" else returns "" which is applied as the class name by ng-class directive. Then whatever css you have applied to class active will be applied to the selected tab.

4
  • What happends is I navigate to another tab by any other mean ? Oct 16, 2016 at 13:55
  • What do you mean?
    – kovac
    Oct 16, 2016 at 14:00
  • for example a link in the page that takes you to another page that is within other tab. Makes sense? Oct 16, 2016 at 14:05
  • In that case I think it's better to use ui-router as suggested by Muli Yulzary in answer above. ui-router assigns a state to each url. So, once someone click on the link, user will be routed to that link and the state of the angular app will be updated. Then ui-sref="active" will highlight the tab. Here's documentation for angular 2: ui-router.github.io/ng2. Also, instead of using the normal bootstrap look at UI Bootstrap done for use with Angular apps. UI Bootstrap: angular-ui.github.io/bootstrap
    – kovac
    Oct 16, 2016 at 14:12
0

Just you'll have to add the required active-class with required color code.

Ex: ng-class="{'active': currentNavSelected}" ng-click="setNav"

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