Reputation: 177
I have a select2 drop down with the following markup:
<select id="selectByName" ui-select2="select2Options" ng-model="selectId" data-placeholder="Select item by name" style="width:250px">
<option></option>
<option ng-repeat='item in items' data-show="{{item.show}}" value="{{item.id}}">
{{item.name}}
</option>
</select>
And the js contains the following:
$scope.items
(an array that has a id, a boolean show property and a name property)
and the select 2 options:
select2Options : {
allowClear: true,
placeholder:"select a value",
formatResult: function(state) {
var $elem = angular.element(state.element),
isVisible = $elem.data('show');
return isVisible ? '<span style="color:red">'+state.text+'</span>':
<span style="color:blue">'+state.text+'</span>';
}
},
Well, the ng-repeat
updates correctly the html markup and sets data-show attribute to either true or false, but the formatResult
function does not update this value.
In the html source the data-show="true"
and in the formatResult
function $elem.data('show') = false;
, why doesn't it update while the function is called every time the select2 is opened?
Here is made a plunker that illustrates my question: plnkr.co/edit/d0LxuhzdQh7hMdzOoxpr?p=preview .It looks the formatResult updates the results correctly only once before opening the select2 for the first time.
Upvotes: 1
Views: 2528
Reputation: 15399
Edit
http://plnkr.co/edit/6Vma1WTQWQw0HAIQUVxE?p=preview
$scope.select2options = {
allowClear: true,
placeholder: "select a value",
formatResult: function(state, container) {
var $elem = angular.element(state.element);
var scope = $elem.data('$scope');
if (scope !== undefined) {
isVisible = scope.$eval($elem.data('show'));
$scope.dataShow[$elem.attr('value')] = isVisible;
$scope.updated++;
return isVisible ? '<span style="color:red">' + state.text + '</span>' :
' <span style="color:blue">' + state.text + '</span>'
}
}
}
The key part is grabbing the $scope
data from the jqLite element and then calling $eval
, which evaluates an unparsed string expression in the context of the scope. If we had used $scope.$eval
, it would have used the controller $scope
, which wouldn't have the ng-repeat
on it. By grabbing it from the element we have a scope that has access to the item
property for the ng-repeat
.
Having said that I don't recommend using this code (sometimes jQuery widgets force you into unpleasant corners when working with angular). Again if you find yourself manipulating angular.element
or using $element
in a controller you probably should use a directive instead. Then again we programmers have to deal with non-ideal constraints (time, money, etc.) that prevent us from working "ideally" so given your context this may be a decent solution.
Let me know if any of my explanation doesn't make sense.
Original
http://plnkr.co/edit/vYTdxPwgwqZSgK5m9yk9?p=preview
Is this what you want?
JavaScript
$scope.items = [{
id: 1,
show: false,
name: 'test1'
}, {
id: 2,
show: true,
name: 'test2'
}, {
id: 3,
show: true,
name: 'test3'
}];
$scope.selections = [1, 2];
$scope.getStyleForIndex = function (index) {
var item;
for (var i = 0; i < $scope.items.length; i++) {
if (i === index) {
item = $scope.items[i];
break;
}
}
return item.show ? { color: "red" } : { color: "blue" };
}
$scope.select2options = {
allowClear: true,
formatResult: function(item, container) {
var color = $scope.getStyleForIndex(parseInt(item.id, 10)).color;
container.html('<span style="color:' + color + '">RESULT ' + item.text + '</span>');
},
formatSelection: function(item, container) {
container.append($compile('<span ng-style="getStyleForIndex(' + item.id + ')">SELECTION ' + item.text + '</span>')($scope));
}
}
HTML
<div ng-repeat="item in items">
{{ item.name }}
<input type="checkbox" ng-model="item.show" />
</div>
<select ui-select2="select2options" ng-model="selections" style="width:200px" multiple="true" ng-options="i.id as i.name for i in items"></select>
{{selections}}
Upvotes: 1