Trying to understand the nature of Angular filters. So I have this:
<p>RandomCase: {{ aString | randomCase }}</p>
and this:
.filter 'randomCase', () ->
(input) ->
input.replace /./g, (c) ->
if Math.random() > 0.5 then c.toUpperCase() else c
Coffeescript makes for a cleaner code here, JS version is found in JSFiddle along with the complete example:
http://jsfiddle.net/nmakarov/5LdKV/
The point is to decorate a string by having random letters capitalized.
it works, but throws "10 $digest() iterations reached. Aborting!" most of the time. I figured that for some reason Angular would re-run the filter at least twice to see that outputs are the same. And if not, will run it again until the last two matches. Indeed, since the filter's code produces a random string, it is quite unlikely it will repeat itself twice in a row.
Now to the question: is it possible to tell Angular not to re-run this filter more than once? I do not need to observe the value of this filtered output in the code, so no need for Angular to watch the changes - even if a hardcoded "string" be used in place of an aString
variable, the code behaves the same - 10 iterations reached...
And I know that I can put the randomizing
logic in a controller and bind the result to a $scope.aString and it would just work - I'm trying to understand the Angular way of filters.
Cheers.