100

Is it possible to pass an argument to the filter function so you can filter by any name?

Something like

$scope.weDontLike = function(item, name) {
    console.log(arguments);
    return item.name != name;
};
0

7 Answers 7

229

Actually there is another (maybe better solution) where you can use the angular's native 'filter' filter and still pass arguments to your custom filter.

Consider the following code:

<div ng-repeat="group in groups">
    <li ng-repeat="friend in friends | filter:weDontLike(group.enemy.name)">
        <span>{{friend.name}}</span>
    <li>
</div>

To make this work you just define your filter as the following:

$scope.weDontLike = function(name) {
    return function(friend) {
        return friend.name != name;
    }
}

As you can see here, weDontLike actually returns another function which has your parameter in its scope as well as the original item coming from the filter.

It took me 2 days to realise you can do this, haven't seen this solution anywhere yet.

Checkout Reverse polarity of an angular.js filter to see how you can use this for other useful operations with filter.

3
  • In case your filter needs multiple arguments, see How do I call an Angular.js filter with multiple arguments?
    – nh2
    Feb 27, 2014 at 15:24
  • This method also solved a weird issue where inside ng-repeat I couldnt pass my own parameters to my filter. No matter what I did they kept coming back as the index and the overall collection. By doing this return method I was able to pass my parameters and still load the original element, great fix! Mar 30, 2015 at 5:51
  • 1
    @DennisSmolek I have one doubt I am struck in this point from long time. How are getting access to friend in the filter function $scope.weDontLike. In my case when I try I get the error message saying that 'angular.js:12520 ReferenceError: friend is not defined' Jul 21, 2020 at 17:24
76

From what I understand you can't pass an arguments to a filter function (when using the 'filter' filter). What you would have to do is to write a custom filter, sth like this:

.filter('weDontLike', function(){

return function(items, name){

    var arrayToReturn = [];        
    for (var i=0; i<items.length; i++){
        if (items[i].name != name) {
            arrayToReturn.push(items[i]);
        }
    }

    return arrayToReturn;
};

Here is the working jsFiddle: http://jsfiddle.net/pkozlowski_opensource/myr4a/1/

The other simple alternative, without writing custom filters is to store a name to filter out in a scope and then write:

$scope.weDontLike = function(item) {
  return item.name != $scope.name;
};
4
  • Thats prefect thanks! Storing the name in the scope won't work so well as I have three lists from the same data on the same page im filtering with different states (or names). Aug 1, 2012 at 7:03
  • any to set 'Adam' (referring to your JSFiddle) dynamically? it seems impossible (and I guess that's on purpose) to combine ngModel and a custom filter in Angular...
    – fbiville
    Apr 20, 2013 at 21:34
  • Is it possible to reorder the parameters of a filter? For example pass the item to the second parameter of a filter?
    – Pooya
    Dec 24, 2014 at 13:11
  • It is worth noting that in this example the markup is {{ items | weDontLike:'thenameyoudontlike' }} ... right now you have to go to the fiddle to get that. Also worth noting that you can pass multiple params to your custom filter {{ items | weDontLike:'thename':['I am', 'an array']:'and so on' }} you would just add more arguments to your custom filter to have access to them. Nov 26, 2015 at 19:56
62

Actually you can pass a parameter ( http://docs.angularjs.org/api/ng.filter:filter ) and don't need a custom function just for this. If you rewrite your HTML as below it'll work:

<div ng:app>
 <div ng-controller="HelloCntl">
 <ul>
    <li ng-repeat="friend in friends | filter:{name:'!Adam'}">
        <span>{{friend.name}}</span>
        <span>{{friend.phone}}</span>
    </li>
 </ul>
 </div>
</div>

http://jsfiddle.net/ZfGx4/59/

5
  • 8
    Yes. Side note - if somebody's name is '!Adam', you get him like {name:'!!Adam'}.
    – honzajde
    Mar 10, 2013 at 0:21
  • 5
    You can also pass arrays here too like this filter:['Adam', 'john']
    – iConnor
    Aug 11, 2013 at 23:12
  • 6
    jsfiddle link is broken. Jan 27, 2014 at 13:35
  • 4
    !Adam is the worst name ever Aug 11, 2014 at 18:29
  • 6
    Not-Not-Adam is obviously worse.
    – twip
    Oct 10, 2014 at 21:00
31

You can simply do like this In Template

<span ng-cloak>{{amount |firstFiler:'firstArgument':'secondArgument' }}</span>

In filter

angular.module("app")
.filter("firstFiler",function(){

    console.log("filter loads");
    return function(items, firstArgument,secondArgument){
        console.log("item is ",items); // it is value upon which you have to filter
        console.log("firstArgument is ",firstArgument);
        console.log("secondArgument ",secondArgument);

        return "hello";
    }
    });
1
  • This is the best answer. It works with dynamic objects. This should be the accepted answer. Apr 2, 2019 at 16:41
2

Extending on pkozlowski.opensource's answer and using javascript array's builtin filter method a prettified solution could be this:

.filter('weDontLike', function(){
    return function(items, name){
        return items.filter(function(item) {
            return item.name != name;
        });
    };
});

Here's the jsfiddle link.

More on Array filter here.

1

You can pass multiple arguments to angular filter !

Defining my angular app and and an app level variable -

var app = angular.module('filterApp',[]);
app.value('test_obj', {'TEST' : 'test be check se'});

Your Filter will be like :-

app.filter('testFilter', [ 'test_obj', function(test_obj) {
    function test_filter_function(key, dynamic_data) {
      if(dynamic_data){
        var temp = test_obj[key]; 
        for(var property in dynamic_data){
            temp = temp.replace(property, dynamic_data[property]);
        }
        return temp;
      }
      else{
        return test_obj[key] || key;
      }

    }
    test_filter_function.$stateful = true;
    return test_filter_function;
  }]);

And from HTML you will send data like :-

<span ng-bind="'TEST' | testFilter: { 'be': val, 'se': value2 }"></span>

Here I am sending a JSON object to the filter. You can also send any kind of data like string or number.

also you can pass dynamic number of arguments to filter , in that case you have to use arguments to get those arguments.

For a working demo go here - passing multiple arguments to angular filter

0

You can simply use | filter:yourFunction:arg

<div ng-repeat="group in groups | filter:weDontLike:group">...</div>

And in js

$scope.weDontLike = function(group) {
//here your condition/criteria
return !!group 
}

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