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Dev Guide: Understanding Directives

Adrian edited this page Dec 20, 2017 · 1 revision

Understanding Directives

This document is an (tangential) attempt to explain how AngularJS directives and the related compiling engine works so that you're not flailing around like a noodle the first time you try to tackle it yourself.

Injecting, Compiling, and Linking functions

When you create a directive, there are essentially up to 3 function layers for you to define [1]:

myApp.directive('uiJq', function InjectingFunction(){

  // === InjectingFunction === //
  // Logic is executed 0 or 1 times per app (depending on if directive is used).
  // Useful for bootstrap and global configuration

  return {
    compile: function CompilingFunction($templateElement, $templateAttributes) {

      // === CompilingFunction === //
      // Logic is executed once (1) for every instance of ui-jq in your original UNRENDERED template.
      // Scope is UNAVAILABLE as the templates are only being cached.
      // You CAN examine the DOM and cache information about what variables
      //   or expressions will be used, but you cannot yet figure out their values.
      // Angular is caching the templates, now is a good time to inject new angular templates 
      //   as children or future siblings to automatically run..

      return function LinkingFunction($scope, $linkElement, $linkAttributes) {

        // === LinkingFunction === //
        // Logic is executed once (1) for every RENDERED instance.
        // Once for each row in an ng-repeat when the row is created.
        // Note that ng-if or ng-switch may also affect if this is executed.
        // Scope IS available because controller logic has finished executing.
        // All variables and expression values can finally be determined.
        // Angular is rendering cached templates. It's too late to add templates for angular
        //  to automatically run. If you MUST inject new templates, you must $compile them manually.

      };
    }
  };
})

You can only access data in $scope inside the LinkingFunction. Since the template logic may remove or duplicate elements, you can only rely on the final DOM configuration in the LinkingFunction. You still cannot rely upon children or following-siblings since they have not been linked yet.

Pre vs Post Linking Functions

Anywhere you can use a LinkingFunction(), you can alternatively use an object with a pre and post linking function. Oddly enough, a LinkingFunction() is a PostLinkingFunction() by default:

link: function LinkingFunction($scope, $element, $attributes) { ... }
...
link: {
  pre: function PreLinkingFunction($scope, $element, $attributes) { ... },
  post: function PostLinkingFunction($scope, $element, $attributes) { ... },
}

The difference is that PreLinkingFunction() will fire on the parent first, then child, and so on. A PostLinkingFunction() goes in reverse, firing on the child first, then parent, and so on. Here's a demo: http://plnkr.co/edit/qrDMJBlnwdNlfBqEEXL2?p=preview

When do I want this reverse PostLinking behavior? Sometimes jQuery plugins need to know the number and size of children DOM element's (such as slideshows or layout managers like Isotope). There are a few ways to support these:

  • (Worst) Delay the plugin's execution using $timeout
  • Nested directives. If each child has a directive, it can require: '^parentDirective' which will give you access to the parentDirective controller.
    • If you use the PreLinkingFunction() on parentDirective, you can instantiate the container empty, and use then update it every time the

This does NOT accomodate for async changes such as loading $scope data via AJAX

If you need to wait till your $scope data finishes loading try using ng-if to defer linking of a block of DOM.

$element === angular.element() === jQuery() === $()

To make working with the DOM easier, AngularJS contains a miniaturized version of jQuery called jqlite. This emulates some of the core features of jQuery using an almost identical API as jQuery. Any time you see an AngularJS DOM element, it will be the equivalent to a jQuery() wrapped DOM element.

You do NOT have to wrap AngularJS elements in jQuery()

If you are noticing that the full array of jQuery methods (or plugins) aren't available on an AngularJS element, it's because you either forgot to load the jQuery lib, or you forgot to load it BEFORE loading AngularJS. If AngularJS doesn't see jQuery already loaded by the time AngularJS loads, it will use its own jqlite library instead.

$attributes.$observe()

If you have a sibling attribute that will contain {{}} then the attribute will need to be evaluated and could even change multiple times. Don't do this manually!

Instead use $attributes.$observe('myOtherAttribute', function(newValue)) exactly as you would have used $scope.$watch(). The only difference in the first argument is the attribute name (not an expression) and the callback function only has newValue (already evaluated for you). It will re-fire the callback every single time the evaluation changes too.

NOTE: This means that you can only access this attribute asynchronously

NOTE: If you want to reliably access the attribute pre-evaluation then you should do it in the CompileFunction

Extending Directives

Lets say you want to use a 3rd-party directive, but you want to extend it without modifying it. There are several ways you can go about doing this.

Global Configurations

Some well-designed directives (such as those found in AngularUI) can be configured globally so that you do not have to pass in your options into every instance.

Require Directives

Create a new directive that assumes the first directive has already been applied. You can require it on a parent DOM element, OR on the same DOM element. If you need to access functionality found in the primary directive, make it exposed via the directive controller (this may require submitting a Pull Request or feature request to the plugin developer).

// <div a b></div>
ui.directive('a', function() {
  return {
    controller: function() {
      this.data = {}
      this.changeData = function( ... ) { ... }
    },
    link: function($scope, $element, $attributes, controller) {
      controller.data = { ... }
    }
  }
})
myApp.directive('b', function() {
  return {
    require: 'a',
    link: function($scope, $element, $attributes, aController) {
      aController.changeData()
      aController.data = { ... }
    }
  }
})

Stacking Directives

You can create a new directive with the exact same name as the original directive. Both directives will be executed. However, you can use the priority to control which directive fires first (again, may require a Pull Request or feature request)

// <div a></div>
ui.directive('a', ... )
myApp.directive('a', ... )

Templating

You can leverage <ng-include> or simply create a directive that generates the HTML with the primary directive attached.

// <div b></div>
ui.directive('a', ... )
myApp.directive('b', function(){
  return {
    template: '<div a="someOptions"></div>'
  }
})

Specialized the Directive Configuration

Sometimes you want create a specialized version of a directive with a new name that has different configuration options (such as templateUrl), while leaving the original directive available. Any directive that is registered makes available a special service with the name 'Directive' appended to it. If you registered <my-dir> (with the name 'myDir') it will create a service called 'myDirDirective'. If you inject that into a new directive provider function, you will get an array of directive configurations (in priority order, presumably). Choose the one you want (usually the first), make a shallow copy of it, modify the configuration and return it.

// <div b></div>
ui.directive('a', ... )
myApp.directive('b', function(aDirective){
   return angular.extend({}, aDirective[0], { templateUrl: 'newTemplate.html' });
})

Footnotes

  1. A transcluding function is actually a 4th layer, but this is not used by uiJq
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