51

I am creating a Toolbar with a selection list (checkboxes with each list item) using Angular Material 2. I just cannot figure out how to set the checkboxes before the list is displayed and then get the selected items following user interaction.

I am trying the control within a Form thinking I may need this to bind to ngModel, but this doesn't seem to help. My html so far is:

<form
  novalidate
  #areaSelectForm="ngForm">

<div>
    <mat-selection-list 
                        #areasList="ngModel"
                        [(ngModel)]="model"
                        id="areaListControl"
                        name="areaListControl"
                        (ngModelChange)="onAreaListControlChanged($event)">
        <mat-list-option *ngFor="let tta of taskTypeAreas" (click)="onCheckboxClick($event)" [value]="tta">
            {{tta}}
        </mat-list-option>
    </mat-selection-list>
</div>

</form>

This must be a well trodden path but the documentation is difficult to interpret and I cannot seem to find any suitable examples.

Any guidance very welcome please.

3 Answers 3

103

As of version 5.0.0, angular material now supports ngModel for selection list.

So the code can be simplified to

<mat-selection-list #list [(ngModel)]="selectedOptions" (ngModelChange)="onNgModelChange($event)">
    <mat-list-option *ngFor="let tta of taskTypeAreas" [value]="tta.name">
        {{tta.name}}
    </mat-list-option>
</mat-selection-list>

The release also exposes an ngModelChange event for selection list. Here is the updated stack blitz


(Original answer before Angular 5.0.0)

It appears mat-selection-list does not currently support ngModel (https://github.com/angular/material2/pull/7456), but it looks like it will be supported in the near future. In the meantime you can use a reference variable #list to grab the selected options.

// component.html
<mat-selection-list #list>
    <mat-list-option *ngFor="let tta of taskTypeAreas" [selected]="tta.selected" 
        (click)="onAreaListControlChanged(list)" [value]="tta.name">
        {{tta.name}}
    </mat-list-option>
</mat-selection-list>

Then pass in the reference variable to your onAreaListControlChanged(list) method so you can parse out the selected options.

// component.ts
onAreaListControlChanged(list){
    this.selectedOptions = list.selectedOptions.selected.map(item => item.value);
}

To select the checkboxes on load, you can use the [selected] property of each <mat-list-option>.

<mat-list-option ... [selected]="tta.selected" ...>

To do this you'll need to add another property to your array.

// component.ts
taskTypeAreas: {
    name: string;
    selected: boolean;
}[] = [
    {
        name: 'Area 1',
        selected: false
    },
    {
        name: 'Area 2',
        selected: false
    },
    {
        name: 'Area 3',
        selected: true
    },
];

This will make Area 3 be selected on load. Here is a stackblitz demoing this.


10
  • Tkx. I could not get the value of the initial list when an item was selected... I did not know I needed to bind the value by myself [value]="tta.name" to the mat-list-options Dec 8, 2017 at 9:36
  • @LLai Thank you! but can you maybe show in your stackblitz how i can use the selected options to trigger functions or change variables?
    – Budi
    Mar 28, 2018 at 19:19
  • @Budi in the updated answer, you can use the ngModelChange event to run some logic when the selected options change.That event is ran whenever an option is selected/deselected
    – LLai
    Mar 28, 2018 at 19:50
  • @Budi I've added a comment to this file. This is where you can call additional methods when the options change
    – LLai
    Mar 28, 2018 at 20:22
  • @LLai Thanks but this was one of the only things that i know before :P I just dont know how i can add here if statements. i tryed with: if (event.name === "Area 1") {console.log('Place here a function')} but he dont fire this console.log when i select Area 1...
    – Budi
    Mar 28, 2018 at 20:31
20

@LLai's answer is correct, but you might have noticed that Angular material selection does not work when we use object as a mat-select-option [value]

To fix this, Angular material provides [compareWith] input.

@Input() compareWith: (o1: any, o2: any) => boolean

Function used for comparing an option against the selected value when determining which options should appear as selected. The first argument is the value of an options. The second one is a value from the selected value. A boolean must be returned.

For example,

list-selection.component.ts

export class ListSelectionExample {

  selectedOptions = [{name: 'Boots', id:1}];
  compareFunction = (o1: any, o2: any)=> o1.id===o2.id;

  typesOfShoes: {name: string, id: number }[] = [
    {name: 'Boots', id: 1}, 
    {name: 'Clogs', id: 2},
    {name: 'Loafers', id: 3 },
    {name: 'Moccasins', id: 4},
    {name: 'Sneakers', id:5}
  ];
}

list-selection.component.html

<mat-selection-list [(ngModel)]="selectedOptions" [compareWith]="compareFunction">
  <mat-list-option *ngFor="let shoe of typesOfShoes" [value]="shoe">
    {{shoe.name}}
  </mat-list-option>
</mat-selection-list>

<p>
  Options selected: {{selectedOptions | json}}
</p>

Find here the live Stackblitz example

1
  • Thanks for much for point out the compareWith thing. I've been all over looking for solutions and either no one wants a default selection or they aren't using complex objects Oct 7, 2020 at 23:33
14

You can use the selectionChange event emitter to trigger a controller function.

<mat-selection-list 
   id="areaListControl"
   name="areaListControl"
   (selectionChange)="onChange($event)"
>
    <mat-list-option 
       *ngFor="let tta of taskTypeAreas" 
       [selected]="tta.selected"
       [value]="tta"
    >
        {{tta}}
    </mat-list-option>
</mat-selection-list>

And in the controller:

onChange(change: MatSelectionListChange) {
   console.log(change.option.value, change.option.selected);
}
1
  • 1
    You should be able to use ViewChildren to access the matListOption instances and then loop through them to check what you need to. Note that the instances won't be available until after the view has loaded you won't be able to do this in onInit.
    – strttn
    May 11, 2020 at 13:59

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