AngularJS: API: ng/directive/ngController


ngController

  1. - directive in module ng

The ngController directive attaches a controller class to the view. This is a key aspect of how angular supports the principles behind the Model-View-Controller design pattern.

MVC components in angular:

  • Model — Models are the properties of a scope; scopes are attached to the DOM where scope properties are accessed through bindings.
  • View — The template (HTML with data bindings) that is rendered into the View.
  • Controller — The ngController directive specifies a Controller class; the class contains business logic behind the application to decorate the scope with functions and values

Note that you can also attach controllers to the DOM by declaring it in a route definition via the $route service. A common mistake is to declare the controller again using ng-controller in the template itself. This will cause the controller to be attached and executed twice.

Directive Info

  • This directive creates new scope.
  • This directive executes at priority level 0.

Usage

  • as attribute:
    <ANY
      ng-controller="">
    ...
    </ANY>

Arguments

ParamTypeDetails
ngControllerexpression

Name of a globally accessible constructor function or an expression that on the current scope evaluates to a constructor function. The controller instance can be published into a scope property by specifying as propertyName.

Example

Here is a simple form for editing user contact information. Adding, removing, clearing, and greeting are methods declared on the controller (see source tab). These methods can easily be called from the angular markup. Any changes to the data are automatically reflected in the View without the need for a manual update.

Two different declaration styles are included below:

  • one binds methods and properties directly onto the controller using this: ng-controller="SettingsController1 as settings"
  • one injects $scope into the controller: ng-controller="SettingsController2"

The second option is more common in the Angular community, and is generally used in boilerplates and in this guide. However, there are advantages to binding properties directly to the controller and avoiding scope.

  • Using controller as makes it obvious which controller you are accessing in the template when multiple controllers apply to an element.
  • If you are writing your controllers as classes you have easier access to the properties and methods, which will appear on the scope, from inside the controller code.
  • Since there is always a . in the bindings, you don't have to worry about prototypal inheritance masking primitives.

This example demonstrates the controller as syntax.

index.html
<div id="ctrl-as-exmpl" ng-controller="SettingsController1 as settings">
  Name: <input type="text" ng-model="settings.name"/>
  [ <a href="" ng-click="settings.greet()">greet</a> ]<br/>
  Contact:
  <ul>
    <li ng-repeat="contact in settings.contacts">
      <select ng-model="contact.type">
         <option>phone</option>
         <option>email</option>
      </select>
      <input type="text" ng-model="contact.value"/>
      [ <a href="" ng-click="settings.clearContact(contact)">clear</a>
      | <a href="" ng-click="settings.removeContact(contact)">X</a> ]
    </li>
    <li>[ <a href="" ng-click="settings.addContact()">add</a> ]</li>
 </ul></div>
app.js
angular.module('controllerAsExample', [])
  .controller('SettingsController1', SettingsController1);

function SettingsController1() {
  this.name = "John Smith";
  this.contacts = [
    {type: 'phone', value: '408 555 1212'},
    {type: 'email', value: 'john.smith@example.org'} ];}

SettingsController1.prototype.greet = function() {
  alert(this.name);};

SettingsController1.prototype.addContact = function() {
  this.contacts.push({type: 'email', value: 'yourname@example.org'});};

SettingsController1.prototype.removeContact = function(contactToRemove) {
 var index = this.contacts.indexOf(contactToRemove);
  this.contacts.splice(index, 1);};

SettingsController1.prototype.clearContact = function(contact) {
  contact.type = 'phone';
  contact.value = '';};
protractor.js
it('should check controller as', function() {
  var container = element(by.id('ctrl-as-exmpl'));
    expect(container.element(by.model('settings.name'))
      .getAttribute('value')).toBe('John Smith');

  var firstRepeat =
      container.element(by.repeater('contact in settings.contacts').row(0));
  var secondRepeat =
      container.element(by.repeater('contact in settings.contacts').row(1));

  expect(firstRepeat.element(by.model('contact.value')).getAttribute('value'))
      .toBe('408 555 1212');

  expect(secondRepeat.element(by.model('contact.value')).getAttribute('value'))
      .toBe('john.smith@example.org');

  firstRepeat.element(by.linkText('clear')).click();

  expect(firstRepeat.element(by.model('contact.value')).getAttribute('value'))
      .toBe('');

  container.element(by.linkText('add')).click();

  expect(container.element(by.repeater('contact in settings.contacts').row(2))
      .element(by.model('contact.value'))
      .getAttribute('value'))
      .toBe('yourname@example.org');});
This example demonstrates the "attach to $scope" style of controller.

index.html
<div id="ctrl-exmpl" ng-controller="SettingsController2">
  Name: <input type="text" ng-model="name"/>
  [ <a href="" ng-click="greet()">greet</a> ]<br/>
  Contact:
  <ul>
    <li ng-repeat="contact in contacts">
      <select ng-model="contact.type">
         <option>phone</option>
         <option>email</option>
      </select>
      <input type="text" ng-model="contact.value"/>
      [ <a href="" ng-click="clearContact(contact)">clear</a>
      | <a href="" ng-click="removeContact(contact)">X</a> ]
    </li>
    <li>[ <a href="" ng-click="addContact()">add</a> ]</li>
 </ul></div>
app.js
angular.module('controllerExample', [])
  .controller('SettingsController2', ['$scope', SettingsController2]);

function SettingsController2($scope) {
  $scope.name = "John Smith";
  $scope.contacts = [
    {type:'phone', value:'408 555 1212'},
    {type:'email', value:'john.smith@example.org'} ];

  $scope.greet = function() {
    alert($scope.name);
  };

  $scope.addContact = function() {
    $scope.contacts.push({type:'email', value:'yourname@example.org'});
  };

  $scope.removeContact = function(contactToRemove) {
    var index = $scope.contacts.indexOf(contactToRemove);
    $scope.contacts.splice(index, 1);
  };

  $scope.clearContact = function(contact) {
    contact.type = 'phone';
    contact.value = '';
  };}
protractor.js
it('should check controller', function() {
  var container = element(by.id('ctrl-exmpl'));

  expect(container.element(by.model('name'))
      .getAttribute('value')).toBe('John Smith');

  var firstRepeat =
      container.element(by.repeater('contact in contacts').row(0));
  var secondRepeat =
      container.element(by.repeater('contact in contacts').row(1));

  expect(firstRepeat.element(by.model('contact.value')).getAttribute('value'))
      .toBe('408 555 1212');
  expect(secondRepeat.element(by.model('contact.value')).getAttribute('value'))
      .toBe('john.smith@example.org');

  firstRepeat.element(by.linkText('clear')).click();

  expect(firstRepeat.element(by.model('contact.value')).getAttribute('value'))
      .toBe('');

  container.element(by.linkText('add')).click();

  expect(container.element(by.repeater('contact in contacts').row(2))
      .element(by.model('contact.value'))
      .getAttribute('value'))
      .toBe('yourname@example.org');});