4

I have some data that consists of various brands, and each brand has a nested array (of strings) containing range names:

[
    {
        "brandName" : "Brand 1",
        "ranges" : [
            "Range A1",
            "Range A2",
            "Range A3"
        ]
    },
    {
        "brand" : "Brand 2",
        "ranges" : [
            "Range B1",
            "Range B2",
            "Range B3"
        ]
    },
]


What I am trying to do is display a select element with a list of options containing range names as their values and innerHTML, based on the previously selected brand in a separate select element.

I'm not sure how to go about targeting the selected brand object in order to gain access to the nested array, as I'm trying to do it 'the Angular way'.

Currently, I've been trying with ngRepeat, but can't get it to work.

In the controller:

$scope.formData = {
    brandData : [
        {
            "brandName" : "Brand 1",
            "ranges" : [
                "Range A1",
                "Range A2",
                "Range A3"
            ]
        },
        {
            "brandName" : "Brand 2",
            "ranges" : [
                "Range B1",
                "Range B2",
                "Range B3"
            ]
        },
    ],
    currentBrand : undefined,
    currentRange : undefined
};


And the simplified markup:

<select name="currentBrand" ng-model="formData.currentBrand">
    <option value="" disabled>Select a brand</option>
    <option value="none" selected>None</option>
    <option ng-repeat="brand in formData.brandData" value="{{brand.brandName}}">{{brand.brandName}}</option>
</select>

<select name="currentRange" ng-model="formData.currentRange">
    <option value="" disabled>Select a range</option>
    <option value="none" selected>None</option>
    <option ng-repeat="how do I show each range name in the 'ranges' array of the selected brand ????? value="{{rangeName}}">{{rangeName}}</option>
</select>


There are some similar questions floating around, but I couldn't find any specific to the data structure that I have.

Thanks in advance!


UPDATE

Thanks to Rohan, I have now achieved my original goal. However, I also wanted the value of each option element to get set to the same value as its innerHTML. To do this I used the track by... feature of ngOptions:

<select name="currentBrand" ng-model="formData.currentBrand" ng-options="brandOption as brandOption.brandName for brandOption in brandOptions track by brandOption.brandName">
    <option value="" disabled>Select a brand</option>
</select>

<select name="currentRange" ng-model="formData.currentRange" ng-options="rangeOption for rangeOption in formData.currentBrand.ranges track by rangeOption">
    <option value="" disabled>Select a range</option>
</select>


For a working example, I have forked and updated Rohan's jsfiddle: http://jsfiddle.net/munkychop/hgzdannz/1/

3 Answers 3

5

Use ng-options for this: https://docs.angularjs.org/api/ng/directive/select

You need to set your selected brand as an object, then use that brand to repeat over your ranges in your next ng-options select.

   <div>
        <select name="currentBrand" ng-model="currentBrand"
                ng-options="brandOption as brandOption.brandName for brandOption in brandOptions">
                <option value="" disabled>Select a brand</option>
            </select>
        </div>

        <span>Selected brand: {{currentBrand}}</span>
        <div>
            <select name="currentRange" ng-model="currentRange"
            ng-options="rangeOption for rangeOption in currentBrand.ranges">
                <option value="" disabled>Select a range</option>
            </select>
        </div>

        <span>Selected Range: {{currentRange}}</span>
    </div>

Here's your working snippet of code:

http://jsfiddle.net/hjq7gbLz/

2
  • That's great thanks, I did look at ngOptions, but couldn't quite piece it together. I'll give this a go when I get home.
    – munkychop
    Jan 19, 2015 at 19:52
  • 1
    This works great, although a little missing piece to complete the answer was setting the value of the option elements to the current value of the data. I achieved this using track by... and I have updated my original question to show the complete functionality.
    – munkychop
    Jan 20, 2015 at 10:36
2

What you need is an index to your selected element in the brand array, so that you can use it in ng-repeat like this:

<option ng-repeat="range in formData.brandData[currentBrand].ranges" value="{{rangeName}}">{{rangeName}}</option>

You can have a variable on your scope to store this, or you can do it more easily by using the index as the value of your options:

<option ng-repeat="brand in formData.brandData" value="{{$index}}">{{brand.brandName}}</option>

Since curretBrand is the model for your select, 2-way data binding will update your brand selector when it changes without the need for any more code on your controller.

Here is a fiddle to demonstrate.

2
  • Ah I see, it makes sense now. I'm going to give Rohan's method a whirl, but I'll also remember this way of doing it, as I'm sure it will come in handy at some point. Thanks
    – munkychop
    Jan 19, 2015 at 19:55
  • Yes Rohan's method is a neater way of doing a similar thing. Jan 19, 2015 at 20:06
0

You could take the approach of defining an method in the controller to get you the range corresponding to the currently selected brand. This may be an approximation to get you going in the right direction:

$scope.getCurrentBrandRanges = function() {
  for (var i=0;i < $scope.formData.brandData.length;i++) {
    if ($scope.formData.brandData[i].brandName == $scope.formData.currentBrand)
      return $scope.formData.brandData[i].ranges;
  }
  return []; // In case nothing matches for some reason.
}

And for the ng-repeat directive you can specify something like:

ng-repeat="range in getCurrentBrandRanges()"
3
  • getCurrectBrandRanges() would execute on each digest - which could be costly. It'd be better to assign the result to a scope property and then ng-repeat over that instead.
    – adam0101
    Jan 19, 2015 at 19:26
  • @adam0101 Agreed. The more recent answers from both James and Rohan are more preferrable to me anyway (Rohan's answer in particular certainly reinforces your point).
    – rchang
    Jan 19, 2015 at 19:32
  • Yep, I was trying to avoid creating extra functions on the controller anyway, as I knew there was a way to get it working within the template. But thanks for the suggestion
    – munkychop
    Jan 19, 2015 at 19:57

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