2

Please, consider the following example:

Template:

<body  ng-controller="MainCtrl">
Search: <input ng-model="search.$" ><br>
Search by tag: <input ng-model="search.tag" >
    <p ng-repeat="item in items | filter:search">
        <span>{{item.content}}</span> <span>{{item.tag}}</span>
    </p>
</body>

Script:

 app.controller('MainCtrl',  function ($scope, $filter, filterFilter) {
 $scope.items = [
     {content:'3333113', tag:['a','b','c']},
     {content:'111111g', tag:['b','c','d']},
     {content:'345345', tag:[]},
     {content:'2221122', tag:['c','d','e']},
     {content:'2221122', tag:[]},
     {content:'333', tag:[]}
  ];
});

When searching via the first input ng-model="search.$" with any data everything is Ok. When searching via the seond input ng-model="search.tag" search does work by tags like a, b, but when it is cleared the restored array lacks the items which had empty search value, e.g. {content:'2221122', tag:[]} in this example.

jsBin example

Why does it happen ? Is there an easy way to avoid it ?

3 Answers 3

3

Short answer:

here is a working code: http://jsbin.com/AwunOyAt/2

You need a directive to make search.tag undefined when it's empty:

Directive:

app.directive('modelUndefined', function(){
  return {
    require: 'ngModel',
    link: function(scope,elm,attrs,ngModel){
      ngModel.$parsers.push(function(val){             
         return val === "" ? undefined : val;
      });
    }
  }
});

html:

<input ng-model="search.tag" model-undefined>

Long answer:

From the docs of filter:filter:

In HTML Template Binding

{{ filter_expression | filter:expression:comparator }}

Parameters#expression

Object: A pattern object can be used to filter specific properties on objects contained by array. For example {name:"M", phone:"1"} predicate will return an array of items which have property name containing "M" and property phone containing "1". A special property name $ can be used (as in {$:"text"}) to accept a match against any property of the object. That's equivalent to the simple substring match with a string as described above.

As you can see, the filter expression can be an object with more then one predicates.

how to trace it?

Initially ngModel won't set search.tag until there is an input so it's still undefined.

First I pass an input into search.$, the search object looks like so:

$scope.search = {
  '$' : 'something'
}

Then I'll pass something into search.tag, the search object:

$scope.search = {
  '$' : 'something',
  'tag': 'anything'
}

But when I clear it then the search object still have the tag property

$scope.search = {
  '$' : 'something',
  'tag': ''
}

filter:filter filters based on both predicates, this is the source code:

  case "object":
    // jshint +W086
    for (var key in expression) {
      (function(path) {
        if (typeof expression[path] == 'undefined') return;
        predicates.push(function(value) {
          return search(path == '$' ? value : (value && value[path]), expression[path]);
        });
      })(key);
  • In our case the expression is the search object , and the paths are $ and tag.
  • See this line: if (typeof expression[path] == 'undefined') return;
  • If we set search.tag = undefined , the filter ignores it.
  • But If we set search.tag = '' this tag path is added to the predicates check array.

How to enforce ngModel to make search.tag undefined when it's empty?

See the directive above, you need to use ngModelController#$parsers to change the way the view value is converted when it updates the model.

3
  • Thanks a lot. Could you please elaborate on $parsers use in the Long answer. Thanks in advance.
    – Igor Malyk
    Feb 4, 2014 at 10:35
  • @IgorMalyk It's a little hard to explain, but I hope it's clear now. Feb 4, 2014 at 10:41
  • So basically after first edit it will search by '' instead of by undefined as a predicate and those items are filtered away and stay like that. If the arrays had at least '' instead of being empty it would work as well. Thanks a lot, great answer !
    – Igor Malyk
    Feb 4, 2014 at 10:57
1

I do not know if it helps but I put in the following:

<p>{{search.tag == undefined}}</p>

It then showed that initially it is undefined und later on it is an empty string (if you empty the input). The search results then kind of make sense.

0

Looks like there is a change in AngularJS version 1.2.10. Using https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/angularjs/1.0.2/angular.min.js does not eliminate empty entries.

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