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I have a multiple sets of two divs and a button for each per page. The two divs contains alternating content that the button should handle switching visibility. I can't seem to think of an Angular solution that can be extensible to multiple separate instances in the page (my mind keeps wanting to get it done in JQuery).

I have created a JSFiddle example here.

You will see two divs p_table class with <span class="trigger">A</span>. The trigger should alternate the two p_table inside their parent div p_container.

2 Answers 2

22

The key for how you are doing it is with ng-class, you can also do it with ng-show/ng-hide. Both implementations require no javascript, just a controller scope.

NG-CLASS: Choose a class based on a variable, which toggles on trigger click.

<div class="p_container">
  <p class="p_table" ng-class="{hidden:!show,chaldean:show}">This is actual content</p>
  <p class="p_table" ng-class="{hidden:show,chaldean:!show}">This is transliterated content</p> 
  <span class="trigger" ng-click="show=!show">A</span>
</div>

NG-SHOW/NG-HIDE: Show or hide on variable. This is the typical way of doing it.

<div class="p_container">
  <p class="p_table" ng-show="show">This is actual content</p>
  <p class="p_table" ng-hide="!show">This is transliterated content</p> 
  <span class="trigger" ng-click="show=!show">A</span>
</div>
4
  • Sorry for the ask but appreciate if you can add a jsfiddle for this. Reason is I am unable to see it working may be due to some issues.
    – Kurkula
    Sep 28, 2015 at 18:52
  • In the answer, there is some code that refers to "chaldean" I assumed it was a variable name, but I cant see it in the original question. Can someone elaborate on what this is for?
    – redfox05
    Nov 10, 2015 at 14:13
  • Look at the poster's JSFiddle link. It is the class name he used in his example. So yes, it is in the original question, if not a little obscured. :) Nov 12, 2015 at 0:39
  • 2
    You have a bug in your NG-SHOW/NG-HIDE example. ng-show="show" does exactly the same as ng-hide="!show" Either use ng-show="show" and ng-hide="show" or use ng-show="!show" in stead of ng-hide.
    – BitfulByte
    Apr 5, 2016 at 13:13
3

Here is how I did it, using ngHide and a tiny toggle function. Working demo Here. I hope this helps

My HTML Markup

<div ng-app="myApp" ng-controller="myCtrl">
            <div id="filter-row">
                <span
                    id="toggle-filter"
                    ng-click="toggleFilter()">
                    <i class="glyphicon glyphicon-heart"></i>
                </span>

                <div class="hiddenDiv" ng-hide="toggle">
                    <p>I am the hidden Div!</p>
                </div>
            </div>
</div>

My AngularJS Controller

var myApp = angular.module("myApp", []);
myApp.controller ("myCtrl", ['$scope', function($scope){
  $scope.toggle = true;
  $scope.toggleFilter = function() {
       $scope.toggle = $scope.toggle === false ? true : false;
  }
}]);
2
  • 1
    The function body can be simplified to $scope.toggle = $scope.toggle === false;
    – DerMike
    Jul 30, 2016 at 19:27
  • even can be more simplified with $scope.toggle = !$scope.toggle; Nov 26, 2020 at 12:38

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