0

What the heck is going on here?

I'm trying to call a function defined on a parent scope's controller through a child directive. For some reason '&' is failing me?

The controller's html:

<div ng-controller="facetCtrl">
    <header>
        <div facet></div>
        <div facet></div>
    </header>
</div>

The facet directive's html:

<div ng-click="selectFacet($event)" notify="facetGroupSelected(facet)">
    <div>{{ name }}</div>
</div>

The controller's coffee:

app = angular.module 'myApp', []

class facetCtrl

  constructor: (@$scope) ->
    @$scope[fn] = @[fn] for fn in [
      'facetGroupSelected'
    ]

  facetGroupSelected: (facetGroup) =>
    console.log(facetGroup)

app.controller 'facetCtrl', [
  '$http'
  facetCtrl'
]

The directive's coffee:

app = angular.module 'myApp'

facetDirective = ->
  replace: true
  restrict: 'A'
  templateUrl: '..path/to/template'
  scope:
    notify: '&'
  link: (scope, element, attrs) ->
    scope.selectFacet = ($event) ->
      scope.notify('someFacetGroup')

app.directive 'facet', [
  'facetDirective'
]

Somewhere along the line, however, my function arguments are getting dropped. The function call from the directive triggers the parent controller's function, but like I said, the arguments don't make it. Are coffee scopes (__bind.apply, etc) breaking something?

2
  • Wow, reading this has made me hate coffeescript.
    – Phill
    May 8, 2014 at 12:17
  • You get used to it. I was really averse to this style of class-controllers at first, but now I find them much easier to maintain, read, and modify.
    – Clev3r
    May 8, 2014 at 12:20

1 Answer 1

1

When calling notify you need to specify the argument in a slightly different way:

$scope.notify( { facet: 'someFacetGroup' } );
2
  • Thank you so much. Was this a recent angular change?
    – Clev3r
    May 8, 2014 at 12:55
  • You are welcome. I'm not sure if that was different in earlier versions.
    – Sebastian
    May 8, 2014 at 12:57

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