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Hello I'm a new for AngularJS

I have a question about $scope.$watch method.

I have three controller. One is named "ParentCtrl"and the others are "FirstChildCtrl" and "SecondChildCtrl". ParentCtrl's scope has a property named "parentVal" which has watcher by FirstChildCtrl's scope.

When I changed "parentVal" in ParentCtrl's scope, watch listener in FirstChildCtrl's scope has been called. But When "parentVal" is changed by SecondChildCtrl's scope, that listener couldn't be called.

What is the difference between them, and How to call watch listener in FirstChildCtrl's scope by SecondChildCtrl's scope.

the code I tried is in Plunker Pluker's link is below
https://plnkr.co/nTxxlUEniUWKgO5IKVAo?p=info

HTML

<head>
  <script data-require="[email protected]" data-semver="1.6.6" src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/angularjs/1.6.6/angular.min.js"></script>
  <script src="angularScript.js"></script>
  <link rel="stylesheet" href="style.css" />
</head>

<body ng-controller="parentCtrl">
  <div ng-controller="firstChildCtrl"></div>
  <div ng-controller="secondChildCtrl"></div>
</body>

Javascript

var app = angular.module('WatchTest', []);
app.controller('parentCtrl', ['$scope', '$interval', 
  function($scope, $interval) {
    $scope.parentVal = 0;

    $scope.$watch('parentVal', function() {
      console.log('parentVal has changed!!!, A message from parentCtrl');
    });
  }
]);

app.controller('firstChildCtrl', [ '$scope', '$interval',
  function($scope, $interval) {
    $scope.$watch('parentVal', function() {
      console.log('parentVal has changed!!!, A message from firstChildCtrl');
    });
  }
]);

app.controller('secondChildCtrl', [ '$scope', '$interval',
  function($scope, $interval) {
    $interval(
      function() {
        $scope.parentVal++;
      }, 1000
    );
  }
])
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1 Answer 1

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Nesting controllers using ng-controller results in normal prototypal inheritance.

This means firstChildCtrl, secondChildCtrl has access to parentVal via the prototypal inheritance. The moment you increment/change parentVal in secondChildCtrl, it will create its own parentVal property and assign the new value to that and for any future reference to parentVal it will refer its own property rather than going up the prototype chain.

If you use an object in your parent controller and update its properties the result would be what you expect.

e.g. let's say the object is data. Then the code would look like this

app.controller('parentCtrl', ['$scope', '$interval', 
  function($scope, $interval) {
    $scope.data = {};
    $scope.data.parentVal = 0;

    $scope.$watch('data.parentVal', function() {
      console.log('parentVal has changed!!!, A message from parentCtrl');
    });
  }
]);

app.controller('firstChildCtrl', [ '$scope', '$interval',
  function($scope, $interval) {
    $scope.$watch('data.parentVal', function() {
      console.log('parentVal has changed!!!, A message from firstChildCtrl');
    });
  }
]);

app.controller('secondChildCtrl', [ '$scope', '$interval',
  function($scope, $interval) {
    $interval(
      function() {
        $scope.data.parentVal++;
      }, 1000
    );
  }
])

With this code you would see the watchers firing, when the value is updated in the secondChildCtrl

Refer this for more information.

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