309

I need to be able to add for example "contenteditable" to elements, based on a boolean variable on scope.

Example use:

<h1 attrs="{'contenteditable=\"true\"': editMode}">{{content.title}}</h1>

Would result in contenteditable=true being added to the element if $scope.editMode was set to true. Is there some easy way to implement this ng-class like attribute behavior? I'm considering writing a directive and sharing if not.

Edit: I can see that there seems to be some similarities between my proposed attrs directive and ng-bind-attrs, but it was removed in 1.0.0.rc3, why so?

7
  • 2
    I haven't come across anything like that. I vote do it! :D Maybe submit it to the angular project. A syntax that better matches the ng-class would be nice. ng-attr="expression".
    – Xesued
    Mar 29, 2013 at 2:48
  • I'm definately considering that yes! Mar 29, 2013 at 3:00
  • 3
    This really isn't the same as ngClass or ngStyle because they control a single attribute and you want to control any attribute. I think it would be better to create a contentEditable directive. Mar 29, 2013 at 4:27
  • @JoshDavidMiller +1 on that. I think there is a little benefit to be able to control any attribute, especially considering the complexity. You can have directives conditionally acting on a variable. Mar 29, 2013 at 14:38
  • <h1 ng-attr-contenteditable="{{editMode && true : false}}">{{content.title}}</h1>
    – mia
    Jan 8, 2015 at 17:07

13 Answers 13

282

I am using the following to conditionally set the class attr when ng-class can't be used (for example when styling SVG):

ng-attr-class="{{someBoolean && 'class-when-true' || 'class-when-false' }}"

The same approach should work for other attribute types.

(I think you need to be on latest unstable Angular to use ng-attr-, I'm currently on 1.1.4)

13
  • 101
    Just to clarify this answer: If you prefix any attribute with ng-attr-, then the compiler will strip the prefix, and add the attribute with its value bound to the result of the angular expression from the original attribute value.
    – Matthias
    Nov 18, 2013 at 21:37
  • 12
    In my opinion it's easier to read if you use a ternary operator, for which support was added in 1.1.5. That would look like: {{ someConditionalExpression ? 'class-when-true' : 'class-when-false' }}
    – dshap
    May 13, 2014 at 21:50
  • 134
    the problem with this approach is that the attribute gets created regardless of the outcome. Ideally we'd like control wether or not the attribute gets created at all.
    – airtonix
    May 19, 2014 at 8:29
  • 26
    Note that the ng-attr- stuff was removed from Angular 1.2. This ansswer is no longer valid. Mar 5, 2015 at 21:20
  • 4
    You are wrong. This project github.com/codecapers/AngularJS-FlowChart uses Angular 1.2 and ng-attr-. Also the latest docs (Angular 1.4) still include ng-attr- Mar 7, 2015 at 1:05
127

You can prefix attributes with ng-attr to eval an Angular expression. When the result of the expressions undefined this removes the value from the attribute.

<a ng-attr-href="{{value || undefined}}">Hello World</a>

Will produce (when value is false)

<a ng-attr-href="{{value || undefined}}" href>Hello World</a>

So don't use false because that will produce the word "false" as the value.

<a ng-attr-href="{{value || false}}" href="false">Hello World</a>

When using this trick in a directive. The attributes for the directive will be false if they are missing a value.

For example, the above would be false.

function post($scope, $el, $attr) {
      var url = $attr['href'] || false;
      alert(url === false);
}
5
  • 3
    I like this answer. However, I don't think if value is undefined it will hide the attribute. I might be missing something, though. So the first result would be <a ng-attr-href="{{value || undefined}}" href>Hello World</a>
    – Roman K
    Nov 6, 2014 at 16:51
  • 15
    @RomanK hi, the manual states that undefined is a special case. "When using ngAttr, the allOrNothing flag of $interpolate is used, so if any expression in the interpolated string results in undefined, the attribute is removed and not added to the element."
    – Reactgular
    Nov 6, 2014 at 18:01
  • 9
    Just a note to aid any future readers, the 'undefined' behaviour appears to have been added in Angular 1.3. I am using 1.2.27 and currently must IE8. Feb 2, 2015 at 16:55
  • 3
    To confirm some more Angular 1.2.15 will display href even if value is undefined, looks like the undefined behavior starts in Angular 1.3 as the above comment states. Mar 31, 2015 at 5:49
  • It's important to note that ng-attr-foo will still always invoke the foo directive if it exists, even ng-attr-foo evaluates to undefined. discussion
    – hughes
    Mar 7, 2017 at 21:32
99
+100

I got this working by hard setting the attribute. And controlling the attribute applicability using the boolean value for the attribute.

Here is the code snippet:

<div contenteditable="{{ condition ? 'true' : 'false'}}"></div>
1
  • As angular can parse the IIF expression this works perfectly for evaluating state in the current scope and assiging values based on that state.
    – mccainz
    Jul 13, 2015 at 17:25
21

In the latest version of Angular (1.1.5), they have included a conditional directive called ngIf. It is different from ngShow and ngHide in that the elements aren't hidden, but not included in the DOM at all. They are very useful for components which are costly to create but aren't used:

<h1 ng-if="editMode" contenteditable=true>{{content.title}}</h1>
6
  • 35
    I believe ng-if only works on an element level, that is, you can't specify a conditional to just one attribute of an element. Mar 17, 2014 at 21:34
  • 3
    Indeed, but you can then do <h1 ng-if="editMode" contenteditable="true"><h1 ng-if="!editMode">
    – Byscripts
    Jun 16, 2014 at 10:26
  • 6
    beware, however, that ng-if creates a new scope. Jul 2, 2014 at 8:59
  • 1
    @ShimonRachlenko Agreed! This can be a big source of confusion and bugs. ng-if creates a new scope but ng-show does not. This inconsistency has always been a sore spot for me. The defensive programming reaction to this is: "always bind to something that a dot in the expression" and it won't be an issue. Jul 4, 2014 at 10:13
  • If you want to add an attribute that is actually a directive, this works great. Shame about the code duplication Feb 3, 2015 at 10:17
16

To get an attribute to show a specific value based on a boolean check, or be omitted entirely if the boolean check failed, I used the following:

ng-attr-example="{{params.type == 'test' ? 'itWasTest' : undefined }}"

Example usage:

<div ng-attr-class="{{params.type == 'test' ? 'itWasTest' : undefined }}">

Would output <div class="itWasTest"> or <div> based on the value of params.type

10

<h1 ng-attr-contenteditable="{{isTrue || undefined }}">{{content.title}}</h1>

will produce when isTrue=true : <h1 contenteditable="true">{{content.title}}</h1>

and when isTrue=false : <h1>{{content.title}}</h1>

3
  • 5
    what if I want some thing like <h1 contenteditable="row"> Jun 23, 2015 at 14:39
  • <h1 ng-attr-contenteditable="{{isTrue ? 'row' : undefined}}">{{content.title}} </h1>
    – PhatBuck
    Dec 22, 2017 at 22:06
  • This should me be the accepted answer. My scenario was <video ng-attr-autoplay="{{vm.autoplay || undefined}}" />
    – LucasM
    Jul 9, 2018 at 19:52
7

Regarding the accepted solution, the one posted by Ashley Davis, the method described still prints the attribute in the DOM, regardless of the fact that the value it has been assigned is undefined.

For example, on an input field setup with both an ng-model and a value attribute:

<input type="text" name="myInput" data-ng-attr-value="{{myValue}}" data-ng-model="myModel" />

Regardless of what's behind myValue, the value attribute still gets printed in the DOM, thus, interpreted. Ng-model then, becomes overridden.

A bit unpleasant, but using ng-if does the trick:

<input type="text" name="myInput" data-ng-if="value" data-ng-attr-value="{{myValue}}" data-ng-model="myModel" />
<input type="text" name="myInput" data-ng-if="!value" data-ng-model="myModel" />

I would recommend using a more detailed check inside the ng-if directives :)

2
  • With this approach, you will be repeating the same code though.
    – Kalyan
    Aug 27, 2014 at 19:13
  • True, but it keeps the model declaration safe. My problem with using the accepted solution was that the value attribute ended up in the DOM, taking precedence over the model declaration. So, if the value attribute is empty but the model is not, the model will be overridden to take an empty value.
    – alexc
    Aug 29, 2014 at 14:36
6

Also you can use an expression like this:

<h1 ng-attr-contenteditable="{{ editMode ? true : false }}"></h1>
0
5

I actually wrote a patch to do this a few months ago (after someone asked about it in #angularjs on freenode).

It probably won't be merged, but it's very similar to ngClass: https://github.com/angular/angular.js/pull/4269

Whether it gets merged or not, the existing ng-attr-* stuff is probably suitable for your needs (as others have mentioned), although it might be a bit clunkier than the more ngClass-style functionality that you're suggesting.

2

For input field validation you can do:

<input ng-model="discount" type="number" ng-attr-max="{{discountType == '%' ? 100 : undefined}}">

This will apply the attribute max to 100 only if discountType is defined as %

1

Edit: This answer is related to Angular2+! Sorry, I missed the tag!

Original answer:

As for the very simple case when you only want to apply (or set) an attribute if a certain Input value was set, it's as easy as

<my-element [conditionalAttr]="optionalValue || false">

It's the same as:

<my-element [conditionalAttr]="optionalValue ? optionalValue : false">

(So optionalValue is applied if given otherwise the expression is false and attribute is not applied.)

Example: I had the case, where I let apply a color but also arbitrary styles, where the color attribute didn't work as it was already set (even if the @Input() color wasn't given):

@Component({
  selector: "rb-icon",
  styleUrls: ["icon.component.scss"],
  template: "<span class="ic-{{icon}}" [style.color]="color==color" [ngStyle]="styleObj" ></span>",
})
export class IconComponent {
   @Input() icon: string;
   @Input() color: string;
   @Input() styles: string;

   private styleObj: object;
...
}

So, "style.color" was only set, when the color attribute was there, otherwise the color attribute in the "styles" string could be used.

Of course, this could also be achieved with

[style.color]="color" 

and

@Input color: (string | boolean) = false;
3
  • 1
    Angular.JS is Angular 1, which is very different from Angular 2+. Your solution answers for Angular 2+, but AngularJS (1) was asked for.
    – ssc-hrep3
    Jun 7, 2019 at 13:12
  • @ssc-hrep3: You are right. Sorry I missed that! Thanks. I edited the answer to point that out. :-)
    – Zaphoid
    Jun 17, 2019 at 16:18
  • is angularjs not angular, angularjs is angular 1
    – dgzornoza
    Mar 26, 2020 at 10:02
1

Was able to get this working:

ng-attr-aria-current="{{::item.isSelected==true ? 'page' : undefined}}"

The nice thing here is that if item.isSelected is false then the attribute simply isn't rendered.

0

Just in case you need solution for Angular 2 then its simple, use property binding like below, e.g. you want to make input read only conditionally, then add in square braces the attrbute followed by = sign and expression.

<input [readonly]="mode=='VIEW'"> 
2
  • is angularjs (angular1) not angular (angular2)
    – dgzornoza
    Mar 26, 2020 at 10:03
  • 1
    angular 2+ and Angular JS are not same, they are more like different products altogether. Jun 6, 2020 at 20:44

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