Welcome to OGeek Q&A Community for programmer and developer-Open, Learning and Share
Welcome To Ask or Share your Answers For Others

Categories

0 votes
470 views
in Technique[技术] by (71.8m points)

angularjs - ng-click doesn't work within the template of a directive

Angular noob here. I am creating a directive to recursively display a tree of questions and sub questions. I am using a link in the template which calls a function within the scope. For some reason, it does't call the editQuestion() method.

Here's the code and the fiddle http://jsfiddle.net/madhums/n9KNv/

HTML:

<div ng-controller="FormCtrl">
  <questions value="survey.questions"></questions>
</div>

Javascript:

var app = angular.module('myApp', []);

function FormCtrl ($scope) {
  $scope.editQuestion = function (question) {
    alert('abc');
  };
  $scope.survey = {
    // ...
  }
}


app.directive('questions', function($compile) {
  var tpl = '<ol ui-sortable' +
    ' ng-model="value"' +
    ' class="list">' +
    '  <li ng-repeat="question in value | filter:search"' +
    '     <a href="" class="question">' +
    '       {{ question.name }}' +
    '     </a>' +
    '     <span class="muted">({{ question.type }})</span>' +
    '     <a href="" class="danger" ng-click="removeQuestion(question)">remove</a>' +
    '     <a href="" class="blue" ng-click="editQuestion(question)">edit</a>' +
    '     <choices value="question.choices"></choices>' +
    '  </li>' +
    '</ol>';

  return {
    restrict: 'E',
    terminal: true,
    scope: { value: '=' },
    template: tpl,
    link: function(scope, element, attrs) {
        $compile(element.contents())(scope.$new());
    }
  };
});

app.directive('choices', function($compile) {
  var tpl = '<ul class="abc" ng-repeat="choice in value">'+
    '  <li>' +
    '    {{ choice.name }}' +
    '    <span class="muted">' +
    '      ({{ choice.questions.length }} questions)' +
    '    </span>' +
    '' +
    '    <a href=""' +
    '      ng-click="addQuestions(choice.questions)"' +
    '      tooltip="add sub questions">' +
    '      +' +
    '    </a>' +
    '' +
    '    <questions value="choice.questions"></questions>'
    '  </li>' +
    '</ul>';

  return {
    restrict: 'E',
    terminal: true,
    scope: { value: '=' },
    template: tpl,
    link: function(scope, element, attrs) {
        $compile(element.contents())(scope.$new());
    }
  };
});

Any help in understanding this would be appreciated.

See Question&Answers more detail:os

与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…
Welcome To Ask or Share your Answers For Others

1 Reply

0 votes
by (71.8m points)

You've got a scope issue. Since you used isolated scope in your directive with scope: { value: '=' }, it no longer has access to your controller's scope that has editQuestion.

You need to pass editQuestion along to your directive's scope so it knows how to call it. This is typically pretty easy, but because of your infinitely recursive directive structure where choices can include questions, it gets a bit trickier. Here's a working fiddle:

http://jsfiddle.net/n9KNv/14/

The HTML now includes a reference to editQuestion:

<div ng-controller="FormCtrl">
    <questions value="survey.questions" on-edit="editQuestion(question)"></questions>
</div>

And your questions directive now expects an onEdit attribute in its scope:

app.directive('questions', function($compile) {
  var tpl = '<ol ui-sortable' +
    ' ng-model="value"' +
    ' class="list">' +
    '  <li ng-repeat="question in value | filter:search"' +
    '     <a href="" class="question">' +
    '       {{ question.name }}' +
    '     </a>' +
    '     <span class="muted">({{ question.type }})</span>' +
      '     <a href="" class="blue" ng-click="onEdit({question: question})">edit</a>' +
      '     <choices value="question.choices" on-edit="onEdit({question: subQuestion})"></choices>' +
    '  </li>' +
    '</ol>';

  return {
    restrict: 'E',
    terminal: true,
      scope: { value: '=', onEdit: '&' },
    template: tpl,
    link: function(scope, element, attrs) {
        $compile(element.contents())(scope.$new());
    }
  };
});

app.directive('choices', function($compile) {
  var tpl = '<ul class="abc" ng-repeat="choice in value">'+
    '  <li>' +
    '    {{ choice.name }}' +
    '    <span class="muted">' +
    '      ({{ choice.questions.length }} questions)' +
    '    </span>' +
    '' +
      '    <questions value="choice.questions" on-edit="onEdit({subQuestion: question})"></questions>'
    '  </li>' +
    '</ul>';

  return {
    restrict: 'E',
    terminal: true,
      scope: { value: '=', onEdit: '&' },
    template: tpl,
    link: function(scope, element, attrs) {
        $compile(element.contents())(scope.$new());
    }
  };
});

Notice how we're targeting question in the ng-click. This is how you target arguments in callback functions. Also notice how in the on-edit we're passing to your choices directive, we're targeting subQuestion. This is because question is already reserved inside of the ngRepeat, so we need to differentiate between the two.

This was probably the hardest concept for me to learn in Angular so far. Once you understand how scope works between controllers, directives, and other directives, the world of Angular is yours. :)


与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…
OGeek|极客中国-欢迎来到极客的世界,一个免费开放的程序员编程交流平台!开放,进步,分享!让技术改变生活,让极客改变未来! Welcome to OGeek Q&A Community for programmer and developer-Open, Learning and Share
Click Here to Ask a Question

...