6

I have diffirent classes for login page and other pages in application so after user logged in I need to change class of body element. Here how I am trying to accomplish this..

index.html

<body [ngClass]="{
  'dashboard site-navbar-small' :isAuthenticated,
  'login-form login-form-second page-login-second' :!isAuthenticated
}">
  <app-root>Loading...</app-root>

login.component.ts

export class LoginComponent {
  @HostBinding('class.login-form.login-form-second.page-login-second')
  siteNavbarSmallClass = false;
  constructor(private auth:Auth){
    this.siteNavbarSmallClass=this.auth.authenticated();
  }
}

app.component.ts

 export class AppComponent {
  @HostBinding('class.dashboard.site-navbar-small')
  dashboardClass = false;
  constructor(private auth:Auth){
      this.dashboardClass=this.auth.authenticated();
  }
}

I am trying to bind ngClass directive to isAuthenticated field.. but I doesnt affected. I heard we are not able to change body element via ts, how can I handle it with anyway ?

1
  • Can you share @Component decorator of your components...
    – Devansh
    Dec 20, 2016 at 18:49

3 Answers 3

8

Bindings outside <app-root> are not supported.

What you can do is to use selector: 'body' in you AppComponent and

@HostBinding('class.dashboard')
dashboardClass = false;

@HostBinding('class.site-navbar-small')
siteNavbarSmallClass = false;

...

and then set the properties to true to get the classes added.

or just

document.body.classList.add('dashboard');
4
  • Hi, can you eloborate your answer? I edited post regarding to your answer Dec 20, 2016 at 19:37
  • how can I add class with have multiple values it throws exceptions when I try this document.body.classList.add('login-form login-form-second'); Dec 20, 2016 at 19:39
  • add('login-form', 'login-form-second'); developer.mozilla.org/en/docs/Web/API/Element/classList Dec 20, 2016 at 20:16
  • 1
    @HostBinding('class') siteNavbarSmallClass = 'my-login-class'; works perfect thanks! Dec 20, 2016 at 21:20
4

One way is to use make the <body> tag the app element by using body as selector and use host-binding to update the app elements classes.

@Component({
   selector: 'body',
   host:     {'[class.someClass]':'someField'}
})
export class AppComponent implements AfterViewInit {
  someField: bool = false;
  // alternatively to the host parameter in `@Component`
  // @HostBinding('class.someClass') someField: bool = false;

  ngAfterViewInit() {
    someField = true; // set class `someClass` on `<body>`
  }
}
2
  • Can you explain what did you do here? Is this a new component with a selector 'body'? or did you change the AppComponent to be the body?? Please add some additional explanations. I want to make this code valid: <body [ngClass]="..."> how does you answer make this work? Jun 2, 2020 at 10:49
  • @GilEpshtain As it was written 4-years ego, I was learning Angular2. What I remember it that changes the selector to body of AppComponent and <body [ngClass]="..."> this will add your class to the body element. Thanks for your concern I also wanted that valid code should be their.
    – Devansh
    Jun 2, 2020 at 17:12
2

You can also use Renderer2 to modify the body class.

renderer.addClass(document.body, "myClass"); 

or

renderer.removeClass(document.body, "myClass"); 

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