The simplest way would be to control for the no data state in your returned view.
<div>
<div ng-if="!hasCustomers">
No Customers Available
</div>
<div ng-if="hasCustomers">
<!-- show some stuff -->
</div>
</div>
Then in your controller you can easily initialize this when you load your data:
angular.module('myApp').controller('MyController', function($scope, myDataService){
$scope.hasCustomers = false;
myDataService.getCustomers()
.then(function(value){
$scope.customers = value.data;
$scope.hasCustomers = customers && customers.length;
});
});
If you want to make sure the data is loaded before your view is ever instantiated, then you can also use the resolve
property on your $route
$routeProvider.when('/someRoute/',{
templateUrl: '/sometemplate.html',
controller: 'MyController',
controllerAs: 'ctrl', // <-- Highly recommend you do this
resolve: {
customerData: function(myDataService){
return myDataService.getCustomers();
}
}
});
resolve
is basically a hash of functions that return a promise, and can be dependency injected just like everything else. The controller and view will not be loaded until all the resolve
promises have been fulfilled.
It will be available in your controller by the same property name you gave it:
angular.module('myApp')
.controller('MyController', function($scope, customerData){
$scope.customers = customerData;
$scope.hasCustomers = customerData && customerData.length;
});