1

I am connected to an api and depending on the state of the player I change the text that shows up

div.meta(ng-if='friend.personastate == 6') Looking to play
div.meta(ng-if='friend.personastate == 5') Looking to trade
div.meta(ng-if='friend.personastate == 4') Snooze
div.meta(ng-if='friend.personastate == 3') Away
div.meta(ng-if='friend.personastate == 2') Busy
div.meta(ng-if='friend.personastate == 1') Online
div.meta(ng-if='friend.personastate == 0') Offline

I use the same thing for a class on a parent div :

ng-class='{grey: friend.personastate == 0, green: friend.personastate == 1, orange:friend.personastate == 2, yellow: friend.personastate == 3, blue:friend.personastate == 4}'

Is it fine to keep it like that because it's interface logic? Or I should make it a partial instead? I don't think it's the controller job to decide what color stuff should be.

2
  • 1
    Well for series of ng-if, ng-switch was made for that situation. To simplify the ng-class, you could use the 3rd example in the selected answer here: stackoverflow.com/questions/7792652/… I've never done ng-class that way and don't have time to at the moment, but I think the expression would be {grey: 0, green: 1, orange: 2, yellow: 3, blue: 4}[friend.personastate] May 15, 2016 at 22:40
  • @TahsisClaus I think you meant {0 :"grey", 1: "green", 2:"orange", 3:"yellow", 4:"blue"}[friend.personastate] Right? May 15, 2016 at 22:51

1 Answer 1

3

An easy way to get rid of all ngIfs is to aggregate all the info into an object, using ngInit. This object looks something like this:

var stateInfo = {
  0: {
    text: 'Offline',
    class: 'grey'
  },
  1: {
    text: 'Online',
    class: 'green'
  },
  2: {
    text: 'Busy',
    class: 'orange'
  },
  // ...
  // You get the idea
  // ...
}

In the template you would be using <div class="meta">{{ stateInfo[friend.personastate].text }}</div> to display the text and ng-class='stateInfo[friend.personastate].class' to set the desired class.

One advantage of this approach is the reduced number of watchers.

2
  • Can I use a directive for this? May 15, 2016 at 23:02
  • @MaximeRoussin-Bélanger Service for the data, directive for the html. Inject the service into the directive and use the service api's in your directive's link function.
    – dewd
    May 15, 2016 at 23:44

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.