23

I'm looking to write two angular directives, a parent and a child directive, to create sortable and cloneable widgets. The intended markup is:

<div class="widget-container" data-sortable-widgets>
      <section class="widget" data-cloneable-widget></section>
<div>

However, the child directive seems to execute before the parent, before a certain element is available (its added by the parent):

function SortableWidgetsDirective() {
    return {
        priority: 200,
        restrict: 'A',
        link: function ($scope, element, attrs) {
            element.find(".widget header").append($("<div class='widget-controls'></div>"));
            element.sortable({  });
        }
    };
}

function CloneableWidgetDirective() {
    return {
        priority: 100,
        restrict: 'A',
        link: function ($scope, element, attrs) {
            // This directive wrongfully executes first so widget-controls is no available
            element.find("header .widget-controls").append($("<div class='clone-handle'></div>"));
        }
    };
}

As you can see i tried setting priority but I think because they're on different elements, it does not work.

How can I make the parent execute first?

1 Answer 1

44

Reasoning

postLink() is executed in reverse order, which means the child directive's postLink() will be called before the parent's (i.e. depth first). For some reason, this is the default behavior (link() actually refers to postLink()). Luckily we also have preLink(), which works the other way around - we can utilize that to our benefit.

To illustrate this - the following snippet of code:

app.directive('parent', function($log) {
    return {
        restrict: 'E',
        compile: function compile(tElement, tAttrs, transclude) {
            return {
                pre: function preLink(scope, iElement, iAttrs, controller) {
                    $log.info('parent pre');
                },
                post: function postLink(scope, iElement, iAttrs, controller) {
                    $log.info('parent post');
                }
            }
        }
    };
});

app.directive('child', function($log) {
    return {
        restrict: 'E',
        compile: function compile(tElement, tAttrs, transclude) {
            return {
                pre: function preLink(scope, iElement, iAttrs, controller) {
                    $log.info('child pre');
                },
                post: function postLink(scope, iElement, iAttrs, controller) {
                    $log.info('child post');
                }
            }
        }
    };
});

… will output the following:

> parent pre
> child pre
> child post
> parent post 

See it live on plunker.

Solution

If we want the parent directive's logic to be performed before the child's, we will explicitly use preLink():

function SortableWidgetsDirective() {
    return {
        restrict: 'A',
        compile: function compile(tElement, tAttrs, transclude) {
            return {
                pre: function preLink(scope, iElement, iAttrs, controller) {
                    iElement.find(".widget header").append($("<div class='widget-controls'></div>"));
                    iElement.sortable({});
                },
                post: angular.noop
            }
        }
    };
}

function CloneableWidgetDirective() {
    return {
        restrict: 'A',
        compile: function compile(tElement, tAttrs, transclude) {
            return {
                pre: function preLink(scope, iElement, iAttrs, controller) {
                    iElement.find("header .widget-controls").append($("<div class='clone-handle'></div>"));
                },
                post: angular.noop
            }
        }
    };
}

References

  • $compile service on the AngularJS docs.

Post Scriptum

  • You are correct, by the way - priority is meant for use with directives that share the same element.

  • angular.noop is just an empty method that returns nothing. If you still want to use the postLink() functions, just place the function declaration instead, as you would normally do, i.e.:

    post: function postLink(scope, iElement, iAttrs, controller) { ... }
    
  • Be ware of the use of templateUrl, as “ Because the template loading is asynchronous the compilation/linking is suspended until the template is loaded ” [source]. As a result, the order of execution will be disrupted. You can remedy this by including the template inlined in the template property instead.

8
  • 1
    do you know that this completely breaks down when supplying a templateUrl? plnkr.co/edit/1OlW6UuhvkfzD27yz2Vc?p=preview This is a problem for me as I need to use one. What do you suggest?
    – parliament
    Mar 3, 2014 at 0:16
  • 1
    yes, see another update - it's worth noting that in the answer body. Mar 3, 2014 at 0:42
  • 1
    actually my template is already on the page in a<script type="text/ng-template" id="my-template></script>. Can I force angular to not load it asynchronously to get around this?
    – parliament
    Mar 3, 2014 at 1:08
  • 6
    The way i got around this was to use template, like mentioned. But to inject $templateCache and do template: $templateCache.get('url.tpl.html'). Neat little trick to keep the pre/post linking order. May 18, 2014 at 22:39
  • 2
    This answer continues to be useful to me. I'd like to add the order of controller initialization for these directives. The order is: parent controller, parent pre, child controller, child pre, child post, parent post,
    – parliament
    Nov 3, 2015 at 21:20

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.