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I want the user to see double curly braces, but Angular binds them automatically. This is the opposite case of this question where they want to not see curly braces used for binding when the page is loading.

I want the user to see this:

My name is {{person.name}}.

But Angular replaces {{person.name}} with the value. I thought this might work, but angular still replaces it with the value:

{{person.name}}

Plunker: http://plnkr.co/edit/XBJjr6uR1rMAg3Ng7DiJ

4

8 Answers 8

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<code ng-non-bindable>{{person.name}}</code>

Documentation @ ngNonBindable

7
  • 7
    You could also use <div> or whatever tag, just add ng-non-bindable
    – Mike Pugh
    Jun 1, 2013 at 1:46
  • 5
    what if the {{value}} is inside of an input tag value? Aug 21, 2015 at 12:15
  • @TimoHuovinen, to output curly braces in an HTML attribute see my answer. May 27, 2016 at 2:34
  • @TimoHuovinen You can use ng-non-bindable in container element, you can see my answer: stackoverflow.com/a/42511222/1407491 Feb 28, 2017 at 14:44
  • This doesn't work presently; using Angular 8. @joeytwiddle 's answer did however. Aug 29, 2019 at 14:36
31

Edit: adding \ slash between brackets inside the quotes works

{{  "{{ person.name }\}"   }}  

this too .. by passes angular interpreting

{{ person.name }<!---->}

this too ..

{{ person.name }<x>} 

{{ person.name }<!>}
4
  • Gives me a Lexer Error Feb 16, 2015 at 23:34
  • 1
    {{ '{{' asd '}}' }} what about his
    – bh_earth0
    Feb 16, 2015 at 23:40
  • 4
    This is a late answer to a question with an accepted answer. If you choose to provide a new answer, you should take extra precautions to make sure the solution works, and should provide compelling reasons why this answer is preferred to the widely accepted answer. Also, this doesn't directly answer the question anyway.
    – Claies
    Feb 17, 2015 at 1:14
  • Like for this one {{...}<!---->}. Sep 5, 2019 at 12:40
15

In our case we wanted to present curly brackets in a placeholder, so they needed to appear inside an HTML attribute. We used this:

 <input placeholder="{{ 'Hello {' + '{person.name}' + '}!' }}" ...>

As you can see, we are building up a string from three smaller strings, in order to keep the curly braces separated.

'Hello {' + '{person.name}' + '}!'

This avoids using ng-non-bindable so we can continue to use ng- attributes elsewhere on the element.

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  • Works (as recently as angular 8). Aug 29, 2019 at 14:37
10

Updated for Angular 9

Use ngNonBindable to escape interpolation binding.

<div ngNonBindable>
  My name is {{person.name}}
</div>
0
4

I wanted single brackets across text and the above solutions didn't work for me. So did want the Angular recommended.

Angular Version: 5

Required Text: My name is {person.name}.

<span>My name is {{'{'}}person.name{{'}'}}.</span>

I hope it helps someone.

3

Use ng-non-bindable in container, this is effective on all element inside here container.

<div ng-non-bindable>
  <span>{{person.name}}</span>
  <img src="#" alt="{{person.name}}">
  <input placeholder="{{person.name}}">
</div>
3
<span>{{</span>{{variable.name}}<span>}}</span>
0

From Angular compiler:

Unexpected character "EOF" (Do you have an unescaped "{" in your template? Use "{{ '{' }}") to escape it.)

So in the original question - you would end up with:

My name is {{ '{' }}{{ '{' }}person.name{{ '}' }}{{ '}' }}

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