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AngularJS has a new feature since the version 1.3.0-beta.10: the "lazy one-time binding".

Simple expressions can be prefixed with ::, telling angular to stop watching after the expression was first evaluated. The common example given is something like:

<div>{{::user.name}}</div>

Is there a similar syntax for expressions like the following ones?

<div ng-if="user.isSomething && user.isSomethingElse"></div>
<div ng-class="{classNameFoo: user.isSomething}"></div>
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1 Answer 1

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Yes. You can prefix every expressions with ::, even the ones in ngIf or ngClass:

<div ng-if="::(user.isSomething && user.isSomethingElse)"></div>
<div ng-class="::{classNameFoo: user.isSomething}"></div>

Actually, the code simply checks that the two first characters in the expression are : in order to activate the one-time binding (and then removes them, thus the parenthesis aren't even needed). Everything else remains the same.

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    It answers my question, although some of the new features don't work well: <div ng-if="::user.isSomething"></div> and <div ng-if="::(!user.isSomething)"></div> both render. It works without the "::".
    – seldary
    May 31, 2014 at 12:32
  • @seldary I can't reproduce the problem. Every expressions prefixed with :: work well for me, as explained in my edit. Can you make a fiddle, if in doubt?
    – Blackhole
    May 31, 2014 at 12:40
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    At first it appeared not to work for me too, with ngClass that had multiple classes defined. I quickly found out that the binding was still bound because some of the watched variables used in ngClass were not yet defined (and we know that angular will wait for value to be defined first before releasing the watcher). Here's a small fiddle to demonstrate this behavior jsfiddle.net/2LkyLoop. Jan 4, 2015 at 13:56
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    @MaxRocket bindonce syntax was added in angular 1.3. So it wont work in 1.2 or lower
    – Berty
    Jun 8, 2015 at 19:17
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    The one-time binding of ng-if does not seem to work. Watcher count is very high with or without the ::. It works well for ng-class, but ng-if does not seem to obey one-time binding for me (1.5.6). Note that I'm trying to one-way bind an object property that came from an ng-repeat. Not sure if that makes a difference. Jun 21, 2016 at 2:23

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