The reason dragstart
is not invoked after reordering the elements, is because you're not really reordering them. You're actually removing the dragged element and then inserting a new copy of it.
This new copy is not handled by aurelia's composition engine, therefore not compiled, and so any aurelia-specific expressions in the html will not do anything. .trigger
is simply a dead tag at that point.
Drag/drop is kind of a special beast and has never been particularly simple to implement in a natural way, especially when there's all kind of custom framework behavior attached to these elements.
You have 3 options here:
Do not use aurelia's trigger
and instead just use el.addEventListener
both when you first create them, and then when you create new copies.
Use aurelia's ViewEngine
to re-compile (parts of) your view whenever you drop an element so that .trigger
is processed which, under the hood, really kind of just does el.addEventListener
anyway
Turn this into custom element with a repeat.for
and let Aurelia handle the html side of things.
Now option 1 would certainly be the quickest way to get it to work, and option 2 would be slightly more robust and tricky to do, but both are quite hacky.
I'm a strong advocate of utilizing the framework rather than hacking around it, because things will be easier to maintain on the longterm and you can more easily add additional fancy behavior as the project evolves.
It may seem much more involved than what you are doing now, but by engaging more of the framework to handle the low-level stuff, you'll have "living" draggable elements with a fully functional Aurelia that you can do much more things with.
So here's just one example of how you might approach option 3:
In app.js, make your columns into a list of javascript objects:
items = [
{ text: "A", id: "item1" },
{ text: "B", id: "item2" },
{ text: "C", id: "item3" },
{ text: "D", id: "item4" },
{ text: "E", id: "item5" }
];
In app.html, pass those items to the columns
custom element (to keep the html similar to your example i'll use as-element
)
<template>
<require from="./resources/elements/columns"></require>
<ul as-element="columns" items.bind="items"></ul>
</template>
In resources/elements/columns.js, work against individual items viewmodels instead of against the html elements:
import { customElement, children, bindable } from "aurelia-templating";
@customElement("columns")
export class Columns {
// keeps a list of the viewmodels of the direct "li" children
@children("li") children;
// the columns
@bindable() items;
// the currently dragged column
dragColumn;
// the customEvent we dispatch from the child "column" element
handleColDragStart(e) {
// the viewmodel we passed into the customEvent
this.dragColumn = e.detail.column;
}
allowDrop(e) {
console.log("handleDragover");
e.preventDefault();
}
drop(e) {
console.log("handleDrop");
if (e.stopPropagation) {
e.stopPropagation();
}
// source drag index
let dragIdx = this.children.indexOf(this.dragColumn);
// if we can't resolve to a sibling (e.g. dropped on or outside the list),
// naively drop it at index 0 instead
let dropIdx = 0;
// try to find the drop target
let dropTarget = e.srcElement;
while (dropTarget !== document.body) {
let dropTargetVm = dropTarget.au && dropTarget.au.controller && dropTarget.au.controller.viewModel;
if (dropTargetVm) {
dropIdx = this.children.indexOf(dropTargetVm);
break;
} else {
dropTarget = dropTarget.parentElement;
}
}
if (dragIdx !== dropIdx) {
// only modify the order in the array of javascript objects;
// the repeat.for will re-order the html for us
this.items.splice(dropIdx, 0, this.items.splice(dragIdx, 1)[0]);
}
return false;
}
}
In resources/elements/columns.html, just listen for the customEvent we dispatch from the column
element and other than that only handle drop
:
<template id="columns" drop.trigger="drop($event)" dragover.trigger="allowDrop($event)">
<require from="./column"></require>
<li as-element="column" repeat.for="col of items" column.bind="col" coldragstart.trigger="handleColDragStart($event)">
</li>
</template>
In resource/elements/column.js handle the dragstart
and dragend
events, then dispatch a customEvent with a reference to the viewModel (so you don't have to deal with the html too much):
import { customElement, bindable } from "aurelia-templating";
import { inject } from "aurelia-dependency-injection";
@customElement("column")
@inject(Element)
export class Column {
el;
constructor(el) {
this.el = el;
}
@bindable() column;
dragstart(e) {
this.el.dispatchEvent(
new CustomEvent("coldragstart", {
bubbles: true,
detail: {
column: this
}
})
);
return true;
}
}
Finally, in resources/elements/column.html just listen for the dragstart
event:
<template draggable="true" dragstart.trigger="dragstart($event)">
<header>${column.text}</header>
</template>
The part of this solution that might look a bit strange to you, also the part that I still consider a bit hacky, is where we try to get the ViewModel via el.au.controller.viewModel
.
This is something you "just need to know". A custom element / html behavior always has an au
property on it that contains a reference to the behavior instance with the controller, view, etc.
This is essentially the easiest (and sometimes the only) way to "get a hold of" aurelia when working directly against the html. With things like drag/drop I don't believe there is any way to avoid this, as there is unfortunately no native aurelia support for it.