162

I am using angular2 for development and was wondering if there is any alternative for ng-disabled in angular2.

For ex. below code is in angularJS:

<button ng-disabled="!nextLibAvailable" ng-click="showNext('library')" class=" btn btn-info btn-xs" title="Next Lib >> {{libraries.name}}">
    <i class="fa fa-chevron-right fa-fw"></i>
</button>

Just wanted to know How can I achieve this functionality? any inputs?

1
  • 15
    [disabled]="!nextLibAvailable" try this might help
    – mayur
    May 11, 2016 at 10:33

5 Answers 5

305

To set the disabled property to true or false use

<button [disabled]="!nextLibAvailable" (click)="showNext('library')" class=" btn btn-info btn-xs" title="Next Lib"> {{libraries.name}}">
    <i class="fa fa-chevron-right fa-fw"></i>
</button>
3
  • 5
    Only works on <button>, (is that true?) , which is reasonable. Else get the error message (i.e. when try to bind to an <a>) ` Can't bind to 'disabled' since it isn't a known property of 'a' ` Apr 21, 2017 at 20:32
  • 4
    It works on every element that has a disabled property. See also stackoverflow.com/questions/35431188/angular Apr 22, 2017 at 6:48
  • The disabled attribute is supported by <button>, <command>, <fieldset>, <keygen>, <optgroup>, <option>, <select>, <textarea> and <input>. Aug 1, 2022 at 18:41
78
[attr.disabled]="valid == true ? true : null"

You have to use null to remove attr from html element.

4
  • 3
    For angular > 2.x this is the correct way using [attr.disabled]
    – dale
    Apr 2, 2017 at 8:27
  • 15
    attr. is only required when the element doesn't have a disabled property. For elements like buttons and input elements attr. is redundant. For elements that don't have a disabled property a binding to attr.disabled is only meaningful if you address it by CSS to make it look like disabled (mouse pointer, gray colors, ...) Apr 22, 2017 at 9:39
  • Yes, this is best way when some of element doesn't have disabled property default.
    – Viraj
    Nov 7, 2017 at 6:40
  • You can see a solution here - it works with this attribute in your components HTML [attr.aria-disabled]="myPropReflectingIfDisabled". It will add an attribute aria-disabled="true" if myPropReflectingIfDisabled is true.
    – Netsi1964
    Dec 6, 2017 at 12:01
13

Here is a solution am using with anular 6.

[readonly]="DateRelatedObject.bool_DatesEdit ? true : false"

plus above given answer

[attr.disabled]="valid == true ? true : null"

did't work for me plus be aware of using null cause it's expecting bool.

1
  • [readonly]="DateRelatedObject.bool_DatesEdit ? true : false" works with Angular 6+
    – Devansh
    Nov 12, 2019 at 4:00
5

For angular 4+ versions you can try

<input [readonly]="true" type="date" name="date" />
0

Yes You can either set [disabled]= "true" or if it is an radio button or checkbox then you can simply use disable

For radio button:

<md-radio-button disabled>Select color</md-radio-button>

For dropdown:

<ng-select (selected)="someFunction($event)" [disabled]="true"></ng-select>

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