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How to pass parameters using ui-sref in ui-router to the controller


I need to pass and receive two parameters to the state I want to transit to using ui-sref of ui-router.

Something like using the link below for transitioning the state to home with foo and bar parameters:

<a ui-sref="home({foo: 'fooVal', bar: 'barVal'})">Go to home state with foo and bar parameters </a>

Receiving foo and bar values in a controller:

app.controller('SomeController', function($scope, $stateParam) {
  //..
  var foo = $stateParam.foo; //getting fooVal
  var bar = $stateParam.bar; //getting barVal
  //..
});     

I get undefined for $stateParam in the controller.

Could somebody help me understand how to get it done?

Edit:

.state('home', {
  url: '/',
  views: {
    '': {
      templateUrl: 'home.html',
      controller: 'MainRootCtrl'

    },

    'A@home': {
      templateUrl: 'a.html',
      controller: 'MainCtrl'
    },

    'B@home': {
      templateUrl: 'b.html',
      controller: 'SomeController'
    }
  }

});

Solution

  • I've created an example to show how to. Updated state definition would be:

      $stateProvider
        .state('home', {
          url: '/:foo?bar',
          views: {
            '': {
              templateUrl: 'tpl.home.html',
              controller: 'MainRootCtrl'
    
            },
            ...
          }
    

    And this would be the controller:

    .controller('MainRootCtrl', function($scope, $state, $stateParams) {
        //..
        var foo = $stateParams.foo; //getting fooVal
        var bar = $stateParams.bar; //getting barVal
        //..
        $scope.state = $state.current
        $scope.params = $stateParams; 
    })
    

    What we can see is that the state home now has url defined as:

    url: '/:foo?bar',
    

    which means, that the params in url are expected as

    /fooVal?bar=barValue
    

    These two links will correctly pass arguments into the controller:

    <a ui-sref="home({foo: 'fooVal1', bar: 'barVal1'})">
    <a ui-sref="home({foo: 'fooVal2', bar: 'barVal2'})">
    

    Also, the controller does consume $stateParams instead of $stateParam.

    Link to doc:

    You can check it here

    params : {}

    There is also new, more granular setting params : {}. As we've already seen, we can declare parameters as part of url. But with params : {} configuration - we can extend this definition or even introduce paramters which are not part of the url:

    .state('other', {
        url: '/other/:foo?bar',
        params: { 
            // here we define default value for foo
            // we also set squash to false, to force injecting
            // even the default value into url
            foo: {
              value: 'defaultValue',
              squash: false,
            },
            // this parameter is now array
            // we can pass more items, and expect them as []
            bar : { 
              array : true,
            },
            // this param is not part of url
            // it could be passed with $state.go or ui-sref 
            hiddenParam: 'YES',
          },
        ...
    

    Settings available for params are described in the documentation of the $stateProvider

    Below is just an extract

    • value - {object|function=}: specifies the default value for this parameter. This implicitly sets this parameter as optional...
    • array - {boolean=}: (default: false) If true, the param value will be treated as an array of values.
    • squash - {bool|string=}: squash configures how a default parameter value is represented in the URL when the current parameter value is the same as the default value.

    We can call these params this way:

    // hidden param cannot be passed via url
    <a href="#/other/fooVal?bar=1&amp;bar=2">
    // default foo is skipped
    <a ui-sref="other({bar: [4,5]})">
    

    Check it in action here