I'm trying to get Angular to generate a CSS slider based on my data. I know that the data is there and am able to generate it for the buttons, but the code won't populate the ng-switch-when for some reason. When I inspect the code, I see this twice (which I know to be correct as I only have two items):
<div ng-repeat="assignment in assignments" ng-animate="'animate'" class="ng-scope">
<!-- ngSwitchWhen: {{assignment.id}} -->
</div>
My actual code:
<div ng-init="thisAssignment='one'">
<div class="btn-group assignments" style="display: block; text-align: center; margin-bottom: 10px">
<span ng-repeat="assignment in assignments">
<button ng-click="thisAssignment = '{{assignment.id}}'" class="btn btn-primary">{{assignment.num}}</button>
</span>
</div>
<div class="well" style="height: 170px;">
<div ng-switch="thisAssignment">
<div class="assignments">
<div ng-repeat="assignment in assignments" ng-animate="'animate'">
<div ng-switch-when='{{assignment.id}}' class="my-switch-animation">
<h2>{{assignment.name}}</h2>
<p>{{assignment.text}}</p>
</div>
</div>
</div>
</div>
</div>
EDIT: This is what I'm trying to emulate, though with dynamic data. http://plnkr.co/edit/WUCyCN68tDR1YzNnCWyS?p=preview
From the docs —
Be aware that the attribute values to match against cannot be expressions. They are interpreted as literal string values to match against. For example, ng-switch-when="someVal" will match against the string "someVal" not against the value of the expression $scope.someVal.
So in other words, ng-switch is for hardcoding conditions in your templates.
You would use it like so:
<div class="assignments">
<div ng-repeat="assignment in assignments" ng-animate="'animate'">
<div ng-switch="assignment.id">
<div ng-switch-when='1' class="my-switch-animation">
<h2>{{assignment.name}}</h2>
<p>{{assignment.text}}</p>
</div>
</div>
</div>
Now this might not fit your use case exactly, so it's possible you'll have to rethink your strategy.
Ng-If is probably what you need — also, you need to be aware of "isolated" scopes. Basically when you use certain directives, like ng-repeat, you create new scopes which are isolated from their parents. So if you change thisAssignment
inside a repeater, you're actually changing the variable inside that specific repeat block and not the whole controller.
Here's a demo of what you're going for.
Notice I assign the selected property to the things
array (it's just an object).
Update 12/12/14: Adding a new block of code to clarify the use of ng-switch
. The code example above should be considered what not to do.
As I mentioned in my comment. Switch should be thought about exactly like a JavaScript switch. It's for hardcoded switching logic. So for instance in my example posts, there are only going to be a few types of posts. You should know a head of time the types of values you are going to be switching on.
<div ng-repeat="post in posts">
<div ng-switch on="post.type">
<!-- post.type === 'image' -->
<div ng-switch-when="image" class="post post-image">
<img ng-src="{{ post.image }} />
<div ng-bind="post.content"></div>
</div>
<!-- post.type === 'video' -->
<div ng-switch-when="video" class="post post-video">
<video ng-src="{{ post.video }} />
<div ng-bind="post.content"></div>
</div>
<!-- when above doesn't match -->
<div ng-switch-default class="post">
<div ng-bind="post.content"></div>
</div>
</div>
</div>
You could implement this same functionality with ng-if
, it's your job to decide what makes sense within your application. In this case the latter is much more succinct, but also more complicated, and you could see it getting much more hairy if the template were any more complex. Basic distinction is ng-switch
is declarative, ng-if
is imperative.
<div ng-repeat="post in posts">
<div class="post" ng-class="{
'post-image': post.type === 'image',
'post-video': post.type === 'video'">
<video ng-if="post.type === 'video'" ng-src="post.video" />
<img ng-if="post.type === 'image'" ng-src="post.image" />
<div ng-bind="post.content" />
</div>
</div>