I have an html where I must show AngularJS
template only when I reach the bottom of the page (I've implemented infinite scrolling).
The first page comes from the server. So I've to put an ng-if
for that first page, because the user could have a bookmark with "address/page=5", and the html template for the first page from the server doesn't have to be in the page.
Now I have the url "address", specific for the page from the server.
ng-if
doesn't work, the page is empty, but if I use ng-show
it all works fine.
HTML
<div ng-app="MyApp" ng-controller="MyCtrl">
<div id="itemsGrid" ng-controller="aCtrl" infinite-scroll='item_gallery.nextPage()' infinite-scroll-distance='1' infinite-scroll-disabled=''>
<div ng-show="server_page()">
//here the first page template
JS
myApp.controller('MyCtrl', function($scope, ItemGallery) {
$scope.item_gallery = new ItemGallery();
...
}
myApp.factory('ItemGallery', function($http) {
var ItemGallery = function() {
...
ItemGallery.prototype.nextPage = function() {
...
}
return ItemGallery;
}
If I do comment
//$scope.item_gallery = new ItemGallery();
ng-if works fine, the page is correctly showed.
The page is showed when I use: ng-if + line commented, ng-show.
NOTE:
ng-if="true"
doesn't work, it's not a problem of the function used, ng-if="server_page()"
I don't want to use ng-show.
Why ng-if
doesn't work? What's the problem with that line? How can I make it working?
Ok I've the solution.
Console was saying me:
Cannot read property 'rel' of null.
This happened because the first thing I was doing inside var ItemGallery = function()
, was to change the href
for the next page (next page comes from ajax request). The href
for the next page is located within a <div>
in the bottom of the current page.
The point is that I'm changing the href
for the next page, BEFORE the current page has been loaded.
So..
window.onload = function () {
this.nextPageQueryString = document.getElementById("nextPage").rel;
this.next_href = this.domain_url + this.nextPageQueryString;
};
NOTE: this has solved my problem, but I find it very strange.
ng-if
wasn't able to see the 'rel' property for the next href
and I got the empty page. Now Angular can see the 'rel' property and it all works fine.
ng-if should work apart of what I have in the html.
I still can't understand the behavior of ng-if
.