I'm turning a piece of a non-angular web page into an Angular version by angular.bootstrapping it with an Angular module. It works great except for the fact that it needs to municate with the other parts of the page. Unfortunately I cannot convert the rest of the page to Angular at this time.
The best way I've figured to do this so far is by firing vanilla JS events on the bootstrapped element containing the information I need to municate.
Are there established patterns or better ways of doing this?
I'm turning a piece of a non-angular web page into an Angular version by angular.bootstrapping it with an Angular module. It works great except for the fact that it needs to municate with the other parts of the page. Unfortunately I cannot convert the rest of the page to Angular at this time.
The best way I've figured to do this so far is by firing vanilla JS events on the bootstrapped element containing the information I need to municate.
Are there established patterns or better ways of doing this?
Share Improve this question edited Dec 18, 2019 at 18:13 Brian Tompsett - 汤莱恩 5,89372 gold badges61 silver badges133 bronze badges asked Feb 27, 2015 at 20:42 KaidenKaiden 2555 silver badges9 bronze badges 3- are u using jquery outside angular ? – levi Commented Feb 27, 2015 at 20:58
- check this answer. stackoverflow./questions/21125332/… – levi Commented Feb 27, 2015 at 21:10
- The app is using MooTools but I have access to jQuery as well. I'd prefer not to use either and opt for a Vanilla JS solution. – Kaiden Commented Feb 27, 2015 at 22:41
3 Answers
Reset to default 10If you need to send a message from vanilla javascript to an AngularJS controller, you can access the scope like this:
var ngScope = angular.element('[ng-controller]').scope();
// or choose a more appropriate selector...
Then, you can do whatever you want on the scope such as broadcast an event or even just invoking a function:
ngScope.$broadcast('myEvent');
ngScope.$apply(ngScope.controllerFunction());
Sending a message from Angular to vanilla javascript should be much simpler. Simply invoke a global event or just access a global function/property.
I had the same problem when I started to migrate the project I am working on to Angular. I had to municate on different type of events like clicks with my non angular app. If you would like to use a known design pattern you can go with "Mediator pattern". It is a publish/subscribe
based munication. You can have a singleton global instance of the mediator and access it from both angular and your non-angular app
Here's a link for the lib: http://thejacklawson./Mediator.js/
Before your app (both of them) loads you can do something like this:
window.mediator = new Mediator();
Later you can have in your Angular app a service like so:
angular.module()
.service('mediator', function() {
var mediator = window.mediator || new Mediator();
return mediator;
});
And from your non-angular app you can simply do:
mediator.subscribe('something', function(data){ ... });
And from your Angular controller or whatever you have you will inject the mediator
service created and use it like so:
mediator.publish('something', { data: 'Some data' });
Now you have both an Angular and non-Angular way of municating between your apps.
This solution did wonders for me.
$on
only listen for angular event such as $braodcast
& $emit
only and they will work within bootstrapped app module only.
If you want to listen jQuery events then it should use .on
/.bind
as like we do in jquery like $('selector').on('event',function(){});
If multiple events are associated with single DOM element then prefer Directive would be the better way get track of element event.
Directive:
app.directive('myCustomer', function() {
return {
restrict: 'E',
pile: function(element,attrs){
element.on('click focus blur',function(){
//code here
});
}
};
});
Otherwise you can bind event listener on specific element, then you can bind it by taking help of jQLite
using $document
, $window
, $element
(Provides controller level element) dependency.
Controller
$document.find('.myClass').on('click',function(e){ //placing on specific element.
//code here
});
Plunkr Example
Hope this could help you, Thanks.