JavaScript

Topic: Anything JavaScript, ECMAScript including Node, React, ...
Sep 18, 2017 01:07
@david that was my thoughts exactly; I made a comment to that effect in the question.
 
Sep 10, 2017 18:54
which is why I assign the value inside to a $scope object that was already made outside earlier.
Sep 10, 2017 18:54
you actually want to be inside that second .then(consume server data), not outside it.
Sep 10, 2017 18:53
if you console.log(call function), you will get the function itself
Sep 10, 2017 18:52
call function -> get data from server -> .then(return server data) -> .then(consume server data).
Sep 10, 2017 18:51
just put in your mind what is actually happening in a logical order:
Sep 10, 2017 18:48
if you put the console.log(value) inside the .then, you can see it is the result of the other .then.
Sep 10, 2017 18:47
when you invoke images.("kelpie"), it is called, and it's .then is called when the function finishes. that result is returned as value, it's not returned as the result of the function call.
Sep 10, 2017 18:45
you don't actually call it until you invoke images("kelpie"). the console.log is logging the promise, because it is happening before the .then
Sep 10, 2017 18:44
inside the images function, you define a promise ($http call) but you aren't actually calling it there.
Sep 10, 2017 18:43
because your order of operations is still wrong.
Sep 10, 2017 18:35
does that make sense?
Sep 10, 2017 18:32
you have to chain the .then together. the outer function is returning a promise, which has a .then that just returns a value. you need a .then(function(value){} on the caller to consume the value.
Sep 10, 2017 18:29
you are still misunderstanding how promises work, I think. I put together a plunker that actually works based on your code: plnkr.co/edit/GPePDvP136TKsQyPCvtB?p=preview
Sep 10, 2017 18:19
ok, so does ng-src not properly display the result?
Sep 10, 2017 18:19
extract it where?? how are you trying to get the value? You cannot see the value directly in a console.log, but you should have no problem using it in other async code.....
Sep 10, 2017 18:19
it's not obvious what your actual problem is here. You suggest that you aren't able to use the result, but none of your code shows that process; all your code here is showing is you attempting to use console.log on a promise, which doesn't tell you anything.
Sep 10, 2017 18:19
you misunderstand how console.log works. console.log is not async; it can't output the response of the promise, it can only output the promise itself.
 
Aug 26, 2017 19:13
I can see what you are trying to accomplish better now, for sure
Aug 26, 2017 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
Aug 26, 2017 19:10
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?
Aug 26, 2017 19:08
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
Aug 26, 2017 19:06
I do know for sure that you can't transclude into an ng-repeat though
Aug 26, 2017 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
Aug 26, 2017 18:51
ok give me a moment to work this out; now that I see the broken plunker I have a bit more to go on
Aug 26, 2017 18:48
ok so here's what I think (and I may be wrong)...
Aug 26, 2017 18:46
I'm looking at it in a bit more detail right now
Aug 26, 2017 18:46
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
Aug 26, 2017 18:44
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.
Aug 26, 2017 18:41
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
Aug 26, 2017 18:40
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?
Aug 26, 2017 18:37
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.
Aug 26, 2017 18:35
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.
Aug 26, 2017 18:35
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?
Aug 26, 2017 18:35
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.
Aug 26, 2017 18:35
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.
 
Jun 29, 2017 00:14
your only real option is to either use binds, or trigger the change from a higher level and then loop through every button in the group to see which one is selected
Jun 29, 2017 00:13
right, you can't make the change event happen. it's not something HTML supports.
Jun 29, 2017 00:09
I'm saying that HTML doesn't support the change event the way you expect, so even though you are trying to make an angular directive, angular can't give you an event trigger that HTML doesn't support. Again, it's not really clear why you need this directive, or why you think that reactive forms means you can't use ngModel....
Jun 29, 2017 00:09
note that this isn't an angular specific issue, it is an HTML/Javascript issue; see stackoverflow.com/questions/11173685/…
Jun 29, 2017 00:09
this won't work the way you expect; The onChange will only trigger on the radio button that is clicked on; it does not trigger on the opposite button, because it wasn't interacted with by the user. this is why I suggested that you use [(ngModel)] on the buttons instead.
Jun 29, 2017 00:09
what do you mean, you don't know how to do it within the directive? what is this directive meant to accomplish? I'm guessing that your plunker will make it a bit more clear what you need.....
Jun 29, 2017 00:09
radio buttons are inputs; typically in angular inputs are bound to data ([(ngModel)]="someProperty"), and monitoring the state of someProperty is much more flexible than monitoring the state of the button.
Jun 29, 2017 00:09
why don't you monitor the state of the property the radio buttons are affecting rather than the state of the buttons themselves?
 

AngularJS

angular.module("ng-chat", ['stackoverflow'])
Jun 14, 2017 20:04
I'm glad I could clarify a few things, and I hope chat was more helpful than just a blind answer
Jun 14, 2017 20:02
It depends on if you want to learn TypeScript or not, mostly.
Jun 14, 2017 20:02
Angular 1.x is still active, and is still being updated. Angular 2.x is a complete rewrite, and uses mostly new technologies like TypeScript, ES6, RJX.... it's not better or worse, particularly, just different
Jun 14, 2017 20:00
the number one rule of thumb in angular, always use a dot in bindings. If you don't see a dot, you might have a primitive, and your bindings might not behave the way you expect.
Jun 14, 2017 19:58
John Papa wrote an amazing style guide for Angular 1.x and Angular 2.x. github.com/johnpapa/angular-styleguide/blob/master/a1/README.md
Jun 14, 2017 19:54
plus you don't have to reference $scope