659

I have written a filter function which will return data based on the argument you are passing. I want the same functionality in my controller. Is it possible to reuse the filter function in a controller?

This is what I've tried so far:

function myCtrl($scope,filter1)
{ 
    // i simply used the filter function name, it is not working.
}
1

15 Answers 15

1059

Inject $filter to your controller

function myCtrl($scope, $filter)
{
}

Then wherever you want to use that filter, just use it like this:

$filter('filtername');

If you want to pass arguments to that filter, do it using separate parentheses:

function myCtrl($scope, $filter)
{
    $filter('filtername')(arg1,arg2);
}

Where arg1 is the array you want to filter on and arg2 is the object used to filter.

12
  • 21
    Sorry, Sir, I still do not understand. Could you possibly make a Jsfiddle to show how to define the filter function body and how it is inserted in HTML file?
    – gm2008
    Jul 19, 2014 at 20:19
  • 34
    @gm2008 you can use number filter like var anyNumber = $filter('number')(12.222222, 2); to get 12.22.
    – vinesh
    Nov 11, 2014 at 17:22
  • 20
    +I for answering the question... which was "How to use a filter in a controller?"
    – Shanimal
    Feb 21, 2015 at 0:05
  • 9
    An example with "currency" build in filter: $filter("currency")(price, "$", 2) So if you had a price = 200, that expression would return "$200.00".
    – Netsi1964
    Mar 4, 2015 at 20:02
  • 2
    The answer by @pkozlowski.opensource is better than this because it reduces "magic strings". One benefit - what if this was in a much more complex controller and you failed to unit test the filter being used? You wouldn't notice the error if you use $filter('filtter1') (2 t's). However, if you inject filtter1Filter Angular will complain immediately that the dependency doesn't exist. Jun 2, 2015 at 20:31
255

Answer provided by @Prashanth is correct, but there is even easier way of doing the same. Basically instead of injecting the $filter dependency and using awkward syntax of invoking it ($filter('filtername')(arg1,arg2);) one can inject dependency being: filter name plus the Filter suffix.

Taking example from the question one could write:

function myCtrl($scope, filter1Filter) { 
  filter1Filter(input, arg1);
}

It should be noted that you must append Filter to the filter name, no matter what naming convention you're using: foo is referenced by calling fooFilter
fooFilter is referenced by calling fooFilterFilter

9
  • 38
    Sure.. but I'm still to find a use case where you would like to inject 10 filters to one class... Such a class would probably violate single responsibility principle... Jan 16, 2013 at 9:29
  • 10
    Just to make clear, that this is no "awkward" JS syntax … var fooFilter = $filter('foo'); fooFilter(arg1, arg2); Jun 15, 2013 at 0:41
  • 13
    @OZ_ what do you mean? It works minification or not. Minification has nothing to do here, see this plunk: plnkr.co/edit/1k6nJnHO8ukBWUfgAyQw?p=preview Aug 14, 2013 at 13:35
  • 2
    This is ideal for using a single filter, which is the case I ran into. Mar 4, 2014 at 15:29
  • 3
    +1 I think the $filter syntax hides dependencies, thus leading to less maintainable code. Injecting filters "statically" is a better choice.
    – BiAiB
    Aug 6, 2015 at 14:56
80

Using following sample code we can filter array in angular controller by name. this is based on following description. http://docs.angularjs.org/guide/filter

this.filteredArray = filterFilter(this.array, {name:'Igor'});

JS:

 angular.module('FilterInControllerModule', []).
    controller('FilterController', ['filterFilter', function(filterFilter) {
      this.array = [
        {name: 'Tobias'},
        {name: 'Jeff'},
        {name: 'Brian'},
        {name: 'Igor'},
        {name: 'James'},
        {name: 'Brad'}
      ];
      this.filteredArray = filterFilter(this.array, {name:'Igor'});
    }]);

HTML

<!doctype html>
<html lang="en">
<head>
  <meta charset="UTF-8">
  <title>Example - example-example96-production</title>
  

  <script src="//ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/angularjs/1.3.0-beta.3/angular.min.js"></script>
  <script src="script.js"></script>
  

  
</head>
<body ng-app="FilterInControllerModule">
    <div ng-controller="FilterController as ctrl">
    <div>
      All entries:
      <span ng-repeat="entry in ctrl.array">{{entry.name}} </span>
    </div>
    <div>
      Filter By Name in angular controller
      <span ng-repeat="entry in ctrl.filteredArray">{{entry.name}} </span>
    </div>
  </div>
</body>
</html>
3
  • 4
    filterFilter(this.array, {name:'Igor'}); is filterFilter a keyword or what it automatically filtered out the data and why ['filterFilter', function(filterFilter) { defined here ! ? Mar 9, 2015 at 10:28
  • A Plnkr with more examples of this technique: plnkr.co/edit/icFurX?p=preview
    – OzBob
    Jan 6, 2016 at 8:21
  • Very helpful. Thanks. Jul 10, 2017 at 12:37
48

Here's another example of using filter in an Angular controller:

$scope.ListOfPeople = [
    { PersonID: 10, FirstName: "John", LastName: "Smith", Sex: "Male" },
    { PersonID: 11, FirstName: "James", LastName: "Last", Sex: "Male" },
    { PersonID: 12, FirstName: "Mary", LastName: "Heart", Sex: "Female" },
    { PersonID: 13, FirstName: "Sandra", LastName: "Goldsmith", Sex: "Female" },
    { PersonID: 14, FirstName: "Shaun", LastName: "Sheep", Sex: "Male" },
    { PersonID: 15, FirstName: "Nicola", LastName: "Smith", Sex: "Male" }
];

$scope.ListOfWomen = $scope.ListOfPeople.filter(function (person) {
    return (person.Sex == "Female");
});

//  This will display "There are 2 women in our list."
prompt("", "There are " + $scope.ListOfWomen.length + " women in our list.");

Simple, hey ?

1
  • 6
    This is exactly what I needed, thanks. Though apparently this is not what the question is about. :)
    – pvgoran
    Sep 24, 2015 at 23:57
40

There are three possible ways to do this.

Let's assume you have the following simple filter, which converts a string to uppercase, with a parameter for the first character only.

app.filter('uppercase', function() {
    return function(string, firstCharOnly) {
        return (!firstCharOnly)
            ? string.toUpperCase()
            : string.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + string.slice(1);
    }
});

Directly through $filter

app.controller('MyController', function($filter) {

    // HELLO
    var text = $filter('uppercase')('hello');

    // Hello
    var text = $filter('uppercase')('hello', true);

});

Note: this gives you access to all your filters.


Assign $filter to a variable

This option allows you to use the $filter like a function.

app.controller('MyController', function($filter) {

    var uppercaseFilter = $filter('uppercase');

    // HELLO
    var text = uppercaseFilter('hello');

    // Hello
    var text = uppercaseFilter('hello', true);

});

Load only a specific Filter

You can load only a specific filter by appending the filter name with Filter.

app.controller('MyController', function(uppercaseFilter) {

    // HELLO
    var text = uppercaseFilter('hello');

    // Hello
    var text = uppercaseFilter('hello', true);

});

Which one you use comes to personal preference, but I recommend using the third, because it's the most readable option.

15
function ngController($scope,$filter){
    $scope.name = "aaaa";
    $scope.age = "32";

     $scope.result = function(){
        return $filter('lowercase')($scope.name);
    };
}

The controller method 2nd argument name should be "$filter" then only the filter functionality will work with this example. In this example i have used the "lowercase" Filter.

12

I have another example, that I made for my process:

I get an Array with value-Description like this

states = [{
    status: '1',
    desc: '\u2713'
}, {
    status: '2',
    desc: '\u271B'
}]

in my Filters.js:

.filter('getState', function () {
    return function (input, states) {
        //console.log(states);
        for (var i = 0; i < states.length; i++) {
            //console.log(states[i]);
            if (states[i].status == input) {
                return states[i].desc;
            }
        }
        return '\u2718';
    };
})

Then, a test var (controller):

function myCtrl($scope, $filter) {
    // ....
    var resp = $filter('getState')('1', states);
    // ....
}
1
  • Will this work in angularjs 1.0.8?? coz its not working for me..says $filter is not defined even after I added that in controller
    – shajin
    Dec 20, 2013 at 7:37
7

AngularJs lets you to use filters inside template or inside Controller, Directive etc..

in template you can use this syntax

{{ variable | MyFilter: ... : ... }}

and inside controller you can use injecting the $filter service

angular.module('MyModule').controller('MyCtrl',function($scope, $filter){
    $filter('MyFilter')(arg1, arg2);
})

If you need more with Demo example here is a link

AngularJs filter examples and demo

2
  • inceting is not a word. Do you mean injecting?
    – kevinc
    Apr 15, 2017 at 12:15
  • oops.yea I mean injecting. Apr 15, 2017 at 19:45
6

There is another way to evaluate filters that mirrors the syntax from the views. The invocation is hairy but you could build a shortcut to it. I like that the syntax of the string is identical to what you'd have in a view. Looks like this:

function myCtrl($scope, $interpolate) { 
  $scope.$eval($interpolate( "{{ myvar * 10 | currency }} dollars." ))
}
2
  • That actually is very useful! Apr 14, 2017 at 11:57
  • 1
    this is fantastic as it allows me to pass a string that looks just like it would in the markup.
    – kevinc
    Apr 15, 2017 at 12:16
5

It seems nobody has mentioned that you can use a function as arg2 in $filter('filtername')(arg1,arg2);

For example:

$scope.filteredItems = $filter('filter')(items, function(item){return item.Price>50;});
2

Simple date example using $filter in a controller would be:

var myDate = new Date();
$scope.dateAsString = $filter('date')(myDate, "yyyy-MM-dd"); 

As explained here - https://stackoverflow.com/a/20131782/262140

0
1

Use below code if we want to add multiple conditions, instead of single value in javascript angular filter:

var modifiedArray = $filter('filter')(array,function(item){return (item.ColumnName == 'Value1' || item.ColumnName == 'Value2');},true)
1

First of all inject $filter to your controller, making sure ngSanitize is loaded within your app, later within the controller usage is as follows:

$filter('linky')(text, target, attributes)

Always check out the angularjs docs

1

if you want to filter object in controller try this

var rateSelected = $filter('filter')($scope.GradeList, function (obj) {
                        if(obj.GradeId == $scope.contractor_emp.save_modal_data.GradeId)
                        return obj;
                });

This will return filtered object according to if condition

0

Reusing An Angular.js Filter - View / Controller

This Solution is covering reusing Angular Filters. Which is yet another way to filter data, and Google landed me here when I needed such; and I like to share.

Use Case

If you are already filtering, say in an ng-repeat in your view (as below), then you might have defined a filter in the controller as further follows. And then you can reuse as in the final examples.

Filter Use Example - Filtered Repeat in View

<div ng-app="someApp" ng-controller="someController">
    <h2>Duplicates</h2>
    <table class="table table-striped table-light table-bordered-light">
        <thead>
            <tr>
                <th>Name</th>
                <th>Gender</th>
            </tr>
        </thead>
        <tbody>
            <tr ng-repeat="person in data | filter: searchDuplicate:true">
                <td>{{person.name}}</td>
                <td>{{person.gender}}</td>
            </tr>
        </tbody>
    </table>
</div>

Angular Filter Definition Example

angular.module('someApp',[])
.controller('someController', function($scope, $filter ) {

    $scope.people = [{name: 'Bob', gender: 'male'  , hasDuplicate: true },
                     {name: 'Bob', gender: 'male'  , hasDuplicate: true },
                     {name: 'Bob', gender: 'female', hasDuplicate: false}];

    $scope.searchDuplicate = { hasDuplicate : true };
})

So, the concept here is that you are already using a filter created for your view, and then realize you would like to use it in your controller also.

Filter Function Use Within Controller Example 1

var dup = $filter('filter')($scope.people, $scope.searchDuplicate, true)

Filter Function Use Within Controller Example 2

Show a Button only if no duplicates are found, using the prior filter.

Html Button

<div ng-if="showButton()"><button class="btn btn-primary" ng-click="doSomething();"></button></div>

Show/Hide Button

$scope.doSomething = function(){ /* ... */ };
$scope.showButton = function(){ return $filter('filter')($scope.people, $scope.searchDuplicate, true).length == 0; };

Some may find this version of filtering easy, and it is an Angular.js option.

The optional comparator parameter "true" used in the view and in the $filter function call specifies you want a strict comparison. If you omit, values can be searched for over multiple columns.

https://docs.angularjs.org/api/ng/filter/filter

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