Bad News
By trial and error I've found out that WOW's "asynchronous content support" will only work if there is a wow
element rendered in the DOM by the time you make the call new WOW().init();
. Otherwise it won't synchronize anything.
Prove:
The only difference is that the working example has this dummy tag in it:
<section class="wow"></section>
So, if you want WOW
to work asynchronously just make sure that you have a dummy element with the "wow" class on it before you make the new WOW().init();
call.
Previous Answer (also interesting, you may want to have a look at it)
Please, have a look at this example that I've made for you
angular.module('wowTest', [])
.factory('wowAPI', ['$http', function ($http) {
return {
getItems: function () { return $http.get('data.json'); }
}
}])
.controller('wowController', function($scope, wowAPI, $timeout){
$scope.items = [];
wowAPI.getItems().success(function(data){
$scope.items=data.items;
}).then(function(){
$timeout(function(){
new WOW().init();
});
});
});
Or the equivalent example with your original code:
var app = angular.module('app', []);
app.controller('mainCtrl', function ($scope, $timeout) {
$scope.items = [];
$timeout(function () {
for (var count = 0; count < 50; count++) {
$scope.items.push({
text: "Item " + count
});
}
}).then(function(){
$timeout(function(){
new WOW().init();
});
});
});
The thing is that it seems that WOW
actually needs to be instantiated after the DOM has rendered, so the function inside the $timeout
ensures that code will be executed at the end of the $diggest
cycle, after your browser has already rendered the new values of your $scope
in the DOM.
I guess that you could also do this (see bellow), but I think that it's much better to chain the promises rather than have one inside the other:
.controller('wowController', function($scope, wowAPI, $timeout){
$scope.items = [];
wowAPI.getItems().success(function(data){
$scope.items=data.items;
$timeout(function(){
new WOW().init();
});
});
});