I'm building an app in angularjs, where I have a central notification queue. Any controller can push into the queue and digest the messages.
I have built a service like:
angular.module('app').factory('notificationSvc', ['translateSvc', notification]);
function notification(translate) {
var notificationQ = [];
var service = {
add: add,
getAll: getAll
};
return service;
function add(message, type) {
notificationQ.push({
message: message,
type: type
});
}
function getAll() {
return notificationQ;
}
}
(One of the problems with this is that the notificationQ
can be modified unsafely by calling svc.getAll()[3].message = "I have changed a message";
or something similar. I originally wanted a "push only" service with immutable messages, but this problem is outside of the scope of this question.)
If I digest this queue in a controller like:
$scope.notifications = svc.getAll();
$scope.current= 0; // currently visible in the panel
And use it like:
<div ng-repeat="notification in notifications" ng-show="$index == current">
<p>{{notification.message}}</p>
</div>
I can bind to it, see it changing and all is well. I can cycle through past notifications by changing the variable current
.
The question:
When the queue gets a new element I want the $scope.index
variable to change to notifications.length - 1
. How do I do that?
I have seen examples using $rootScope.$broadcast('notificationsChanged');
and $scope.$on('notificationsChanged', function() { $scope.index = $scope.notifications.length - 1; });
, but I did not really like the pattern.
I have a controller that knows about the service, has a direct reference to it, and yet we use $rootScope
to communicate? Everything else sees the $rootScope
, and all the events from different services will clutter up there.
Can't I just put the event on the service instead? Something like this.$broadcast('notificationsChanged')
in the service and svc.$on('notificationsChanged', function() { ... });
in the controller.
Or would it be cleaner to watch the data directly? If yes, how? I don't like this as I was not planning on exposing the full array directly (I was planning on get(index)
methods) it just sort of happened along the lines where I had no idea what I was doing and was happy that at least something works.
this.$broadcast
andsvc.$on
, you could also just lets controllres register callbacks with the service, and call those callbacks directly in the service when things changed.