23

I have this piece of layout html:

<body ng-controller="MainController">
  <div id="terminal"></div>

  <div ng-view></div>

  <!-- including scripts -->
</body>

Now apparently, when I try to use $routeParams in MainController, it's always empty. It's important to note that MainController is supposed to be in effect in every possible route; therefore I'm not defining it in my app.js. I mean, I'm not defining it here:

$routeProvider.when("/view1", {
  templateUrl: "partials/partial1.html"
  controller: "MyCtrl1"
})

$routeProvider.when("/view2", {
  templateUrl: "partials/partial2.html"
  controller: "MyCtrl2"
})

// I'm not defining MainController here!!

In fact, I think my problem is perfectly the same as this one: https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/angular/ib2wHQozeNE

However, I still don't get how to get route parameters in my main controller...

EDIT:

What I meant was that I'm not associating my MainController with any specific route. It's defined; and it's the parent controller of all other controllers. What I'm trying to know is that when you go to a URL like /whatever, which is matched by a route like /:whatever, why is it that only the sub-controller is able to access the route parameter, whereas the main controller is not? How do I get the :whatever route parameter in my main controller?

1
  • Ok, then where do you define it? If the module doesn't know about, then...? Jul 8, 2013 at 6:29

6 Answers 6

72

The $routeParams service is populated asynchronously. This means it will typically appear empty when first used in a controller.

To be notified when $routeParams has been populated, subscribe to the $routeChangeSuccess event on the $scope. (If you're in a component that doesn't have access to a child $scope, e.g., a service or a factory, you can inject and use $rootScope instead.)

module.controller('FooCtrl', function($scope, $routeParams) {
  $scope.$on('$routeChangeSuccess', function() {
    // $routeParams should be populated here
  });
);

Controllers used by a route, or within a template included by a route, will have immediate access to the fully-populated $routeParams because ng-view waits for the $routeChangeSuccess event before continuing. (It has to wait, since it needs the route information in order to decide which template/controller to even load.)

If you know your controller will be used inside of ng-view, you won't need to wait for the routing event. If you know your controller will not, you will. If you're not sure, you'll have to explicitly allow for both possibilities. Subscribing to $routeChangeSuccess will not be enough; you will only see the event if $routeParams wasn't already populated:

module.controller('FooCtrl', function($scope, $routeParams) {
  // $routeParams will already be populated
  // here if this controller is used within ng-view

  $scope.$on('$routeChangeSuccess', function() {
    // $routeParams will be populated here if
    // this controller is used outside ng-view
  });
);
3
  • 1
    Great! Very well-written. Mar 12, 2015 at 14:51
  • I am using stateprovider.. so its never called.. but when i use $stateChangeSuccess then r$outeParams still empty object
    – Sami
    Oct 29, 2015 at 11:53
  • @Sami: you need to use $stateParams instead of $routeParams Dec 16, 2015 at 13:07
4

As an alternate to the $timeout that plong0 mentioned...

You can also inject the $route service which will show your params immediately.

angular.module('MyModule')
  .controller('MainCtrl', function ($scope, $route) {
      console.log('routeParams:'+JSON.stringify($route.current.params));
  });
1
  • for me the $routeChangeSuccess was not firing sometimes and $route.current.params saved me! Thanks mate!
    – snippetkid
    Mar 9, 2017 at 9:59
2

I have the same problem.

What I discovered is that, $routeParams take some time to load in the Main Controller, it probably initiate the Main Controller first and then set $routeParams at the Child Controller. I did a workaround for it creating a method in the Main Controller $scope and pass $routeParams through it in the Child Controllers:

angular.module('MyModule')
  .controller('MainController', ["$scope", function ($scope) {
    $scope.parentMethod = function($routeParams) {
     //do stuff
    }
  }]);

angular.module('MyModule')
  .controller('MyCtrl1', ["$scope", function ($scope) {
    $scope.parentMethod($routeParams);
  }]);

angular.module('MyModule')
  .controller('MyCtrl2', ["$scope", function ($scope) {
    $scope.parentMethod($routeParams);
  }]);
1

had the same problem, and building off what Andre mentioned in his answer about $routeParams taking a moment to load in the main controller, I just put it in a timeout inside my MainCtrl.

angular.module('MyModule')
  .controller('MainCtrl', function ($scope, $routeParams, $timeout) {

    $timeout(function(){
      // do stuff with $routeParams
      console.log('routeParams:'+JSON.stringify($routeParams));
    }, 20);

  });

20ms delay to use $routeParams is not even noticeable, and less than that seems to have inconsistent results.

More specifically about my problem, I was confused because I had the exact same setup working with a different project structure (yo cg-angular) and when I rebuilt my project (yo angular-fullstack) I started experiencing the problem.

1
0

You have at least two problems here:

  • with $routeParams you get the route parameters, which you didn't define

  • the file where you define a main controller doesn't really matter. the important thing is in which module/function

The parameters have to be defined with the $routeProvider with the syntax :paramName:

$routeProvider.when("/view2/name1/:a/name2/:b"

and then you can retrieve them with $routeParams.paramName.

You can also use the query parameters, like index.html?k1=v1&k2=v2.

app.js is the file where you'd normally define dependencies and configuration (that's why you'd have there the app module .config block) and it contains the application module:

var myapp = angular.module(...);

This module can have other modules as dependencies, like directives or services, or a module per feature. A simple approach is to have a module to encapsulate controllers. An approach closer to your original code is putting at least one controller in the main module:

myapp.controller('MainCtrl', function ($scope) {...}

Maybe you defined the controller as a global function? function MainCtrl() {...}? This pollutes the global namespace. avoid it.

Defining your controller in the main module will not make it "to take effect in all routes". This has to be defined with $routeProvider or make the controller of each route "inherit" from the main controller. This way, the controller of each route is instantiated after the route has changed, whereas the main controller is instantiated only once, when the line ng-controller="MainCtrl" is reached (which happens only once, during application startup)

4
  • Hey, could you show some code using the 'inherit' approach ? I'm curious about how could you do that ?
    – CHAPa
    May 6, 2014 at 22:19
  • hi @CHAPa maybe this will help: stackoverflow.com/questions/18461263/… I guess you can have a controller in a div higher than ng-view May 7, 2014 at 7:59
  • the controller inheritance means scope inheritance ? if yes, we could create a outer controller that has inside the ng-view. Thanks Eduard
    – CHAPa
    May 7, 2014 at 10:39
  • ah yep, that's what I meant May 7, 2014 at 12:37
0

You can simply pass values of $routeParams defined into your controller into the $rootScope

.controller('MainCtrl', function ($scope, $routeParams, MainFactory, $rootScope) {
    $scope.contents = MainFactory.getThing($routeParams.id);
    $rootScope.total = MainFactory.getMax(); // Send total to the rootScope
}

and inject $rootScope in your IndexCtrl (related to the index.html)

.controller('IndexCtrl', function($scope, $rootScope){
    // Some code
});

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