1

When I go to a child state, I want to hide a ui-view component of a quadrant ui-view in root state. How can achieve this.

##index.html

<div ui-view="a">
</div>
<div ui-view="b">
</div>
<div ui-view="c">
</div>

##b.html

<div ui-view>
</div>

##config

$stateProvider.state('start', {
         'views': {
                   'a': {
                        templateUrl: ...
                        },
                   'b': {
                         templateUrl: 'b.html'
                        },
                   'c': {
                         templateUrl: ...
                        }
                  },
           controller: 'indexController
         }).state('start.all', {
                   templateUrl: 'd.html',
                   controller:  'allController'
                 });

So when I reach start.all, I would like that the ui-view tagged c vanishes. How can I accomplish this.

2 Answers 2

2

There is an example demonstrating approach discussed below. The native way of ui-router, I'd say, is to manage all the views from current (active) state. We can do it with :

... Behind the scenes, every view gets assigned an absolute name that follows a scheme of viewname@statename, where viewname is the name used in the view directive and state name is the state's absolute name, e.g. contact.item

In our case, the full name of the view 'c' would be c@, i.e. c as view name, @ as delimiter and empty string representing the root (a bit weird but in fact logical).

Having that we can change the start.all definition like this:

.state('start.all', {
    url : '/all',
    'views': {
      '': {
        template: '<span>this is start ALL</span>',
      },
      'c@': {
        template: '<span></span>',
      },
    },
  })

And we will change the content of the c view in the root. And that should be the most native way with ui-router. It does not effectively remove it, but we can replace it with some empty stuff.

Also, into your example above, I placed controller called bController as contra example to the indexController:

.state('start', {
    url : '/start',
    'views': {
      'a': {
        template: ...
      },
      'b': {
        template: ...
        // HERE a new controller bController
        controller: 'bController', 
      },
      'c': {
        template: ...
      }
    },
    // the orginal contoller
    controller: 'indexController',
  })

and also defined them this way:

.controller('indexController', function($scope, $state, $stateParams) {
  console.log('indexConroller was invoked');
})
.controller('bController', function($scope, $state, $stateParams) {
  console.log('bConroller was invoked');
})

Why? to show you, that indexController will never be invoked. Contollers belongs to templates/views not to state...

Check all that together here

3
  • 1
    Thanks for helping with one very relevant example of viewname@statename. this seems to work very well. Good working example
    – Pankaj Lal
    Jun 25, 2014 at 10:15
  • +1 but I think this is a bit of a hack. Not shown on the answer here (but in the Plunker) is the tacking on of the <ui-view /> element onto the 'b' view template. That is pretty arbitrary and confusing. Technically more correct than my answer, but surely you don't override views like this in real applications? Jun 25, 2014 at 11:48
  • @david004, just to your comment ... is the tacking on of the <ui-view /> element onto the 'b' view template... My plunker is doing the same as was in a question. I did followed that 100%. I just inlined above templateUrl: 'b.html' and its <div ui-view></div> into one line: template: '<div>this is B <ui-view /></div>'. These are the same...;) Jun 25, 2014 at 11:59
0

You could do it in a few ways. One way would be to have an abstract state containing views a and b. That abstract state then has two concrete child states: start, which adds view c, and all, which adds view d.

Another option is to just use the ng-show directive on the c view's root element bound to some scope variable. I would go with the first option.

Notably this does not answer the question because all is no longer a child of start. If there is a real need for all to inherit from start (there appears to be no need at present) you can just make start abstract and create a start.main and start.all.

Though Radim's solution is very clever and much appreciated, I think this is much more readable and intuitive than overriding a parent view with an empty template.

<body>
    <div ng-app="myApp">
        <a ui-sref="start.main">start</a> | <a ui-sref="start.all">all</a>
        <hr />
        <div class="rootView" ui-view="a"></div>
        <div class="rootView" ui-view="b"></div>
        <div class="rootView" ui-view=""></div>
    </div>
<script>

    var myApp = angular.module('myApp', ['ui.router']);

    myApp.config(function ($stateProvider, $urlRouterProvider) {

        $urlRouterProvider.otherwise('/start/main');

        $stateProvider

        // Content common to all views
        .state('shell', {
            abstract: true,
            views: {
                "a": { template: '<div>View a here.</div>' },
                "b": { template: '<div>View b here.</div>' },
                "": { template: '<div ui-view></div>' }
                }
        })
        // Content common to all 'start' views (currently nothing)
        .state('start', {
                parent: 'shell',
                url: '/start',
                abstract: true,
                template: '<div ui-view></div>'
        })
        .state('start.main', {
                url: '/main',
                template: '<div>View c is here</div>'
        })
        .state('start.all', {
                url: '/all',
                template: '<div>View d is here</div>'
        });
});

</script>
</body>
1
  • Second option, Didn't like the ng-show idea. First Option, What you said is probably a cleaner structuring of ui-views to solve my need, but I like Radim Köhler's method. Indicates that one can do things from even deep within hierarchy.
    – Pankaj Lal
    Jun 25, 2014 at 10:17

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