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18:35
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Q: Angularjs component event for after all children are initialized

George MauerLooking at the documentation of angularjs component api events I'm not finding a hook that would fire after all child directives are initialized and linked. Is there such an event? I would like to create a component that uses ngRepeat to stamp out a bunch of stuff in a template and then use $tr...

This feels like an XY Question. It's not really clear (even with your plunkr) what you are really trying to accomplish with $transclude that couldn't be accomplished by structuring the model. $transclude is one of the most misunderstood and misused pieces of angular, and it's really rare that it's even necessary.
@Claies I guess I'm not sure what is really unclear about this. I suppose in the overall, I'm trying to make a reusable component that works similarly to ngRepeat but the component places some additional structures around each of the elements that are transcluded out. I've looked at the source for ngRepeat and it handles a lot of complex situations, so rather than re-implement all of that, I'd rather just compose that into an element that wraps it.
but that's just the thing, what is "additional structures around each of the elements"? and if it works "similarly to ng-repeat", then why not just use ng-repeat instead of re inventing the wheel? A real world scenario that demonstrates what it is you are really expecting as an output would go a long way, since when I look at your plunkers (from this question and the previous one you asked about $transclude) they both look like they are doing exactly what $transclude is meant to do.
in this example, you have a single <test> element, and it clones the inner content, loops the content 3 times, and then replaces the original inner content with the looped content. is that not what you were expecting?
@Claies because thats what a "reusable component" is. Let's say there's a commonly used ui in my app that creates a frame with some standard headers, then a ul, and lis each of which have a standard header and footer. However the contents of each item are different depending on usage. I don't want everyone throughout my application to have to copy-paste that templating code every time, I want the reusable component itself to control it so it can be changed at a single point.
Because an actual component won't duplicate its contents multiple times, each time providing a different scope for them to bind to. In order to do that you have to use $transclude
In this example what I expect is for the content of the <test> component to be rendered 3 times - once in each of the <li> elements with the scope passed to each transclusion being different
that's not how $transclude works. it's not going to duplicate <test> it is going to still only render <test> a single time, with the inner html of it replaced.
18:35
@Claies dealt with that yesterday :) Thats actually not true if you use the second cloneLinkingFn parameter which seems to be made exactly for my use case. If you want to jump to chat I can explain to you the real world scenario I'm dealing with.
Disclaimer: I think I understand AngularJs pretty darn well and I think its one of the most poorly designed UI systems out there. But I'll try to be nice :)
Ok, so here's my situation. I have several UIs in my application where users view multiple grids in a vertical list
the grids themselves are fairly complex, and I already have a component for them - they're complex enough though that each use case requires a bunch of bindings and setting of options
I'm not trying to pass judgement, just trying to help. I just know from answering a lot of questions on the framework that people generally try to make things more difficult than they really have to be.
yeah sure, I agree
for each one of theses "grid lists" users have the ability to add or remove grids (and I'm sure in the future to sort)
in addition they can create additional grid lists
so what it actually is is a sort of reporting interface for a time entry tracking system
Managers can go in and create these "grids" into a dashboard (with multiple tabs of grids) and they can create multiple grids, and for each one, configure filters, and then create multiple lists as well
ok, so that's all data structures so far, nothing that really explains why $transclude is necessary.... why can't the data be passed as a parameter to the component?
right
so at its heart sure we can do something like
```
<ul ng-repeat="grid in $ctrl.grids">
<li>
<header>
...stuff for the grid header
</header>
<my-app-grid>
...grid filters
```
I can do that, and it works
and, perhaps I'm still confused, but your comments in this plunker https://plnkr.co/edit/r1zZARIhUGdrVx503QxW?p=preview say "//The transclusion should appear 3 times right? Since we're appending 3 times?" and when I look at the output, I do see This is 10 for Quables Archibald McQuey

This is 11 for Quables Archibald McQuey

This is 12 for Quables Archibald McQuey
18:42
oh...then yes, that is confusing, thats not what I'm seeing
is that different?
I understand why that is happening...at the time that my transclusion runs and fires the second parameter callback, none of the children of the component have been linked (I think thats the term?) and rendered yet
ok in that one, I saw the data flash for a second, which makes me think that the transclusion probably had data, ran, and then replaced the output with null.
nah...the thing that flashes is the template because I load angular at the bottom
and don't ng-cloack or whatever it is
no, I actually saw two flashes, one with a template of expressions, then a second where it looked like it was parsing data, then the data disappeared
I'm looking at it in a bit more detail right now
oh, yeah that makes sense too
well actually
no...that doesn't
yeah I don't see two flashes
So what happens is this
this.$postLink = () => {
  //The transclusion should appear 3 times right? Since we're appending 3 times?
  for(let index=0;index<this.iterations.length;index++) {
    const s = $scope.$new(true, $scope)
    Object.assign(s, {index})
    console.log(s, $element.html())
    $transclude(s, clone =>  $element.find('li').eq(index).append(clone) )
  }
runs before the template gets fully rendered
but note that the transclusion is appending stuff to instances of li that aren't there
ok so here's what I think (and I may be wrong)...
18:49
so I suppose the very first time it runs...maybe because the template is still just a template (but I don't think it is...) the very first ('li').eq(0) finds a match and renders some stuff into the template itself, then gets wiped out
but I don't even see that flash
and console.logs don't show any lis found at all...
ok give me a moment to work this out; now that I see the broken plunker I have a bit more to go on
Yah, thanks
editted the right plunkr link in
but hopefully you agree this is a more valid use of $transclude :D (I did try to consult with other people who were all about angular first and that seemed to be the recommendation)
19:05
as it stands, I don't really know how to solve this. I don't think you are using the right approach though, since $transclude is trying to inject your template for each iteration, but your template has an ng-repeat which isn't iterated because you are expanding it yourself. I think what you want is to have a template that is only the <li> rows, but I'm not even sure that will work
I do know for sure that you can't transclude into an ng-repeat though
so here, let me show you what I want it to expand to
<ul class="time-grids app-panel">
<li ng-repeat="grid in $ctrl.gridConfigurations">
<header>
<h3 id="{{$ctrl.generateGridId(grid, $index)}}">
<a href="#{{$ctrl.generateGridId(grid, $index)}}">
<span contenteditable ng-model="grid.name"></span>
</a>
</h3>
</header>
<mz-grid columns="grid.gridColumns"
filter="grid.filter"
api="grid.getTimeEntries"
export-url="$ctrl.exportUrl(grid.filter)"
ng-click="$ctrl.startEditDelete($event, grid)"
on-data-loaded="grid.totalDurationMinutes = totalDurationMinutes"
(see full text)
ugh...hmm...how do we do code in this thing?
well hopefully you can see that its somewhat complex
the API that I want is this
<time-entry-listings name="companyTime"
api="$ctrl.timeEntryApi"
extra-columns="$ctrl.addUserAndEditColumns"
ng-if="$ctrl.usersInfo">
<mz-grid columns="grid.gridColumns"
filter="grid.filter"
api="grid.getTimeEntries"
export-url="$parent.$parent.$ctrl.exportUrl(grid.filter)"
ng-click="$parent.$parent.$ctrl.startEditDelete($event, grid)"
on-data-loaded="grid.totalDurationMinutes = totalDurationMinutes"
on-sort="grid.sortChanged(sortModel)" >
<date-range start="grid.filter.startDate" end="grid.filter.endDate"></date-range>
(see full text)
if you look at the actual output, what you have is `<test><ul><li></li></ul><ul><li></li></ul>...</test> because your transclude is inserting multiple copies of the template
yeah...but again, if I knew how to fire stuff of after the template was fully rendered I can do this
but there doesn't seem to be an event for it
the other thing is that my time-entry-listings component is not solely ui, there is functionality there as well (I want it to coordinate data loading for the contained grids and to coordinate the saving of configured filters)
I'm pretty sure that making a component here is the correct thing to do, I just have no clue how to actually do it
I mean, you can try to use $compile to compile the ng-repeat, but even then, I don't think you want the ng-repeat on the ul, because I don't think you want to repeat the ul, I think you want to repeat the li, yeah?
doing something stupid like putting that code into a $timeout(..., 0) works but that makes me want to stab people...
19:12
I'll poke at it a bit more, maybe talk to some other people that know some of this stuff better than I do
I can see what you are trying to accomplish better now, for sure
ok, well thanks for confirming I'm not crazy at least

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