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)
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)
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
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
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 ```
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
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
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 :)
@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.
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
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
@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.
@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.