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I'm experiencing some problems regarding manipulation of the DOM after looping through the data.

We have a jQuery slider plugin that is tied to data and works normally, but when using ng-repeat, we have to wrap its initialization with $timeout for it to work — and now that isn't even working.

I think using $timeout is unreliable, which makes for a bad fix. In jQuery I could use $(document).ready() — which was solid, but using angular.element(document).ready() doesn't seem to work either.

The slider directive is invoked but cannot obtain the height of the images in the slider because the images have not been loaded into the DOM — resulting in the slider having a calculated height of 0.

I'm finding it very frustrating at the moment - there must be a way to manipulate the DOM after data (in an ng-repeat for example) has cycled through.

The Initialization of the slider is performed as follows:

var sliderLoad = function () {
    $timeout(function () {
        var setHeight = elem.find('.slide:eq(0)').outerHeight(true);
        elem.css({
            height: setHeight
        });
    }, 1000);
    // Show the slider nav buttons
    elem.parent().find('.direction-nav').show();
};

… and here is a reproduction demo.

10
  • 1
    What is the behaviour of a slider once initialised? I think there is a better way of doing this. EDIT: If it's from a library a link to a demo would be great.
    – Ed_
    Mar 13, 2014 at 16:07
  • Hey @EdHinchliffe - I haven't quite got the slider to work in plunkr but the code looks a bit like this: plnkr.co/edit/PupKzfsu3uSov555Atfx?p=preview Mar 13, 2014 at 16:45
  • I see the problem.. it's a tricky one. Basically the directive you have created gets compiled and linked to the scope before the transcluded content. So when you link function runs, the ng-repeat inside it hasn't been compiled. Thinking..
    – Ed_
    Mar 13, 2014 at 17:17
  • 1
    Damn :( @EdHinchliffe. I was concerned about this. I'm gonna put a directive in it to detect when the ng-repeat is finished. and then broadcast a message to build the slider maybe? It's a difficult one indeed...!!! To be honest it could be ANY plugin in my opinion, Angular just seems a bit messy! Mar 13, 2014 at 18:06
  • 1
    Hey @EliranMalka - we're still implementing this but I just want to say thank you again for the answer. Really appreciate the detail and time you must have taken over it. Mar 20, 2014 at 9:38

1 Answer 1

39


Quick-'n-Dirty it (Demo)

We would want to make sure that all images are loaded, so let's write a directive for that:

app.directive('loadDispatcher', function() {
    return {
        restrict: 'A',
        link: function(scope, element, attrs) {
            element.bind('load', function() {
                scope.$emit('$imageLoaded');
            });
        }
    };
})

… and attach it to the ng-src'd elements:

<img class="thumb-recipe" ng-src="{{ object.tile_url }}" load-dispatcher/>

Now we can compare the number of events caught with our model, and act as needed:

var loadCount = 0;
scope.$on('$imageLoaded', function () {
    if (loadCount++ === scope.videos.objects.length - 1) {
        _initSlider(); // act!
    }
});


Decouple it (Demo)

This is a little disturbing, as it's not adhering to the Law of Demeter — any directive that will watch the $imageLoaded event will have to know about the model (scope.videos.objects.length).

We can prevent this coupling by finding out how many images were loaded without explicitly addressing the model. Let's assume that the events will be handled in an ng-repeat.

  1. Make sure ng-repeat has finished, and fire an event with the items count. We can do that by attaching a controller with a sole purpose - to watch the $last property. Once it's found (with a truthy value), we will fire an event to notify about it:

    .controller('LoopWatchCtrl', function($scope) {
        $scope.$watch('$last', function(newVal, oldVal) {
            newVal && $scope.$emit('$repeatFinished', $scope.$index);
        });
    })
    
    <div ng-repeat="object in videos.objects" ng-controller="LoopWatchCtrl">
    
  2. Now, catch the events and activate the slider initialization accordingly:

    var loadCount = 0,
        lastIndex = 0;
    
    scope.$on('$repeatFinished', function(event, data) {
        lastIndex = data;
    });
    
    scope.$on('$imageLoaded', function() {
        if (lastIndex && loadCount++ === lastIndex) {
            _initSlider(element); // this is defined where-ever
        }
    });
    

There, now our directive does not have to know about the model. But, it's a bit cumbersome, now we have to tie a directive and a controller.


Fold it (Demo)

Let's extract this whole shabang into a single directive:

app.directive('imageLoadWatcher', function($rootScope) {
    return {
        restrict: 'A',
        link: function(scope, element, attrs) {
            if (typeof $rootScope.loadCounter === 'undefined') {
                $rootScope.loadCounter = 0;
            }
            element.find('img').bind('load', function() {
                scope.$emit('$imageLoaded', $rootScope.loadCounter++);
            });
        },
        controller: function($scope) {
            $scope.$parent.$on('$imageLoaded', function(event, data) {
                if ($scope.$last && $scope.$index === $rootScope.loadCounter - 1) {
                    $scope.$emit('$allImagesLoaded');
                    delete $rootScope.loadCounter;
                }
            });
        }
    };
});

… which will be applied to the ng-repeated element:

<div ng-repeat="object in videos.objects" class="slide" image-load-watcher>

Now we can simply watch $allImagesLoaded e.g. in the slider:

scope.$on('$allImagesLoaded', function() {
    _initSlider(element);
});


Generalize it (if you want to) (Demo)

We can break it down again and apply this approach app-wide to use event dispatching for any ng-repeat finish or ng-src load, which is not always necessary (1), but can be quite useful. Let's see how:

  1. Decorate the ng-src directive, so it sends an event when an image is loaded:

    app.config(function($provide) {
        $provide.decorator('ngSrcDirective', function($delegate) {
            var directive = $delegate[0],
                link = directive.link;
            directive.compile = function() {
                return function(scope, element, attrs) {
                    link.apply(this, arguments);
                    element.bind('load', function() {
                        scope.$emit('$imageLoaded');
                    });
                };
            };
    
            return $delegate;
        });
        // ...
    });
    
  2. Decorate ng-repeat to notify when it finishes:

    app.config(function($provide) {
        // ...
        $provide.decorator('ngRepeatDirective', function($delegate) {
            var directive = $delegate[0],
                link = directive.link;
            directive.compile = function() {
                return function(scope, element, attrs) {
                    link.apply(this, arguments);
                    scope.$watch('$$childTail.$last', function(newVal, oldVal) {
                        newVal && scope.$emit('$repeatFinished');
                    });
                };
            };
    
            return $delegate;
        });
    });
    
  3. Now can catch the events anywhere, e.g. in your slider directive:

    var repeatFinished = false;
    var loadCount = 0;
    
    scope.$on('$repeatFinished', function() {
        repeatFinished = true;
    });
    
    scope.$on('$imageLoaded', function () {
        if (repeatFinished && 
                    loadCount++ === scope.videos.objects.length - 1) {
            _initSlider(); // this is defined where-ever
        }
    });
    

It seems to defeat the purpose, as we're back to square one, but it can be very powerful. And also — look, mommy, no new directives!

<div ng-repeat="object in videos.objects" class="slide">
    <img class="thumb-recipe" ng-src="{{ object.tile_url }}"/>
</div>


Put a sock in it (Demo)


     TL;DR, just gimme tha demo ! ! !     
 



1. Decoration has to be considered carefully, as the result will be sending an event on each image loaded across the application.


Overriding the link function will not be possible in version 1.3.x onwards.

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  • 1
    Hey - I'll give that a try tomorrow :) thanks for the detailed answer Mar 13, 2014 at 21:44
  • 1
    What an elaborate answer! Thank you
    – VitalyB
    Jul 10, 2014 at 20:25
  • 2
    You sir, deserve a medal for javascript programming!! newVal && scope.$emit('$repeatFinished');!! Mind blown.
    – user1741851
    Sep 26, 2014 at 9:39
  • 1
    thanks, @nightgaunt, it's nice to be appreciated :) this works as almost all expressions in javascript returns a value, which can be treated as truthy or falsey (boolean). that form of writing is called functional-style coding. Nov 19, 2014 at 13:13
  • Yup. It is not very often I see people using it and rarely in a case where it reduces a lengthy code.
    – user1741851
    Nov 20, 2014 at 3:53

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