0

I have one requirement. Can you anybody suggest the possible ways to achieve it.

I want to change the theme of my application based on the URL passed in every routes.I am using the below technologies. - Frontend : Angular JS - Backend : Node.js

eg: localhost/x/about localhost/y/about

I achieved these via cookies by passing the param using localtion.search at the time of login. But I need that theme param in all the routes.Based on that theme need to change.Can anyone suggest the possible ways.

app.js

app = angular.module('themeApp', ['ngRoute'])  
app.config(function($routeProvider){
$routeProvider
 .when('/',{
    templateUrl: 'home.html'
 })
 .when('/:id/about',{
    templateUrl: 'about.html'
 })
.otherwise({
    redirectTo: '/'
});
});
app.controller('themeController', function ($scope, $routeParams) {  
 console.log($routeParams.id);
 // set the default theme   
 $scope.css = $routeParams.id;
});  

menu.html (it is not complete, confuse here. please correct, how to call)

 <li>
   <a href="about">About</a>

 </li>
 <li>
     <a href="home">Home</a>

 </li>

index.html

 <html ng-app="themeApp" ng-controller="themeController">  
 <head>  
  <!-- pull in css based on angular -->  
 <link rel="stylesheet" ng-href="css/{{css}}.css">   
 </head>  
 <body>  
 <div ng-view></div>
    <!-- bring in JS and angular -->  
    <script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/angular.js/1.2.14/angular.js">        </script>
    <script rc="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/angular.js/1.2.14/angular-route.js"></script>

    <script src="app.js"> </script> 
  </body>  
  </html>  

css/

it contains the three files,
- red.css

body{  
  background-color: red;
  color: #333;
  font-family: "Source Sans Pro",Calibri,Candara,Arial,sans-serif;  
  font-size: 15px; 
}  
  • green.css body{
    background-color: green; color: #333; font-family: "Source Sans Pro",Calibri,Candara,Arial,sans-serif;
    font-size: 15px; }
    • blue.css body{
      background-color: blue; color: #333; font-family: "Source Sans Pro",Calibri,Candara,Arial,sans-serif;
      font-size: 15px; }

1 Answer 1

0

The quick and simple answer would be to use $rootScope. $rootScope is available to all controllers, but like all global variables should be used sparingly.

Here's a good post explaining $rootScope. http://www.dotnet-tricks.com/Tutorial/angularjs/UVDE100914-Understanding-AngularJS-$rootScope-and-$scope.html

Basically if you're using it on your two controllers for pages x and y

app.controller('login',['$scope','$rootScope', function ($scope,$rootScope) {
    $rootScope.foo='bar';
}]);

app.controller('xCtrl',['$scope','$rootScope', function ($scope,$rootScope) {
    $scope.lorem=$rootScope.foo;
    console.log($scope.lorem); //bar
}]);

app.controller('yCtrl',['$scope','$rootScope', function ($scope,$rootScope) {
    $scope.ipsum=$rootScope.foo;
    console.log($scope.ipsum); //bar
}]);

Can then use them in your HTML markup as normal.

Using $rootScope is much simpler, but if you wanted to use the router to pull down the id each time, it is also possible.

app.config(function($routeProvider){
    $routeProvider
     .when('/',{
        controller: 'indexController',
        templateUrl: 'view/index.html'
     })
     .when('/:id/about',{
        controller: 'xCtrl',
        templateUrl: 'view/x.html'
     })
    .otherwise({
        redirectTo: '/'
    });
});

app.controller('xCtrl',['$scope','$routeParams', function($scope,$routeParams){
    $scope.foo=$routeParams.id;
}]);

If you have a lot more pages than just /about I could imagine this getting a bit tricky with the routing.

You could even couple it with root scope then pass it around to your other controllers.

app.controller('xCtrl',['$scope','$rootScope','$routeParams', function($scope,$rootScope,$routeParams){
    $rootScope.foo=$routeParams.id;
    $scope.lorem=$rootScope.foo;
}]);

--EDIT based on comment-- I might need some code to be sure of what you're after, but perhaps this clarifies?

URL: mysite.com/blue/about

app.config(function($routeProvider){
    $routeProvider
     .when('/',{
        controller: 'indexController',
        templateUrl: 'view/index.html'
     })
     .when('/:id/about',{
        controller: 'xCtrl',
        templateUrl: 'view/x.html'
     })
    .otherwise({
        redirectTo: '/'
    });
});

app.controller('xCtrl',['$scope','$routeParams', function($scope,$routeParams){
    $scope.theme=$routeParams.id;
}]);

HTML

<div ng-controller="xCtrl">
    <div ng-class="{{theme}}">
        My theme is {{theme}}.
    </div>
</div>

CSS

.blue
{
    background-color: blue;
}
.green
{
    background-color: green;
}
15
  • this is answer suitable for the changing templates via rootscope.As my requirement is user has to see the theme info in url as well as css file changes accordingly. Dec 21, 2015 at 10:01
  • this has only one css with several classes. I want to manage multiple css files for each theme and that url should be same for all navigations in application. eg: localhost/x/about , localhost/x/contact and localhost/y/about , localhost/y/contact. If user types any of url, i have to change css file either x / y Dec 21, 2015 at 11:41
  • Try using if statements in your controller to set additional variables for classses if you need them.
    – yjimk
    Dec 21, 2015 at 11:50
  • How the query param keep as it, in all routes/ pages Dec 21, 2015 at 11:54
  • If you have all of your routes behind id it will continue to work. /:id/about or /:id/lorem/ipsum or /:id/x/y/z will be able to take the id param from $routeParams
    – yjimk
    Dec 21, 2015 at 12:10

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.