I've been facing a trouble while working with Factory/Service. I've created an AjaxRequests factory for all of my AJAX calls. My factory code is
.factory('AjaxRequests', ['$http', function ($http) {
return {
getCampaignsData: function () {
var campaigns
return $http.get(url).then(function (response) {
campaigns = response.data;
return campaigns;
});
}
}
}])
I've created another service in which I am injecting this factory. My service code
.service('CampaignsService', ['$rootScope', 'AjaxRequests', function ($rootScope, AjaxRequests) {
this.init = function () {
this.camps;
AjaxRequests.getCampaignsData().then(function (response) {
this.camps = response.campaigns;
console.log(this.camps); // It is showing data
})
console.log(this.camps); // But it is not working :(
};
this.init();
}])
And in my controller
.controller('AdvanceSettingsController', ['$scope', 'CampaignsService', function ($scope, CampaignsService) {
$scope.CampaignsService = CampaignsService;
}
])
I've read this article to learn promises but it is not working here. I can directly achieve it in controller and it's been working fine. But it consider as a bad coding standard to make controller thick. But when I use service and factory I stuck. My question is why I am not getting ajax data to use in my whole service ? I need to use CampaignsService.camps in my view template as well as in my whole rest script but every time I get undefined. What is happening here? I've asked the same question before but couldn't get any success. Some one please help me to understand about promises and why I am getting this type of error if I'm working same ? This type of question has already been asked before but it was working in controller. May be I am stuck because I'm using it in a service.
A big thanks in advance.
This is not a bug or some tricky functionality. Just like in any other AJAX implementation, you can only access the response data in AngularJS's $http success method. That's because of the asynchronous nature of Asynchronous JavaScript And XML.
And what you have is working.
.controller('AdvanceSettingsController', ['$scope', 'AjaxRequests', function ($scope, AjaxRequests) {
$scope.camps = [];
AjaxRequests.getCampaignsData().then(function(data) {
$scope.camps = data;
});
}
])
And then bind camps:
<div ng-repeat="camp in camps>{{camp.name}}</div>
What's bad in your implementation is that instead of grouping related stuff in services you are writing a big AjaxRequests service for everything. You should have a CampaignsService that has a getData method and inject that in your controller.
Why is this working? Because $http does a $scope.$apply for you, which triggers a digest cycle after the data is loaded (then) and updates the HTML. So before the then callback that ng-repeat is run with [] and after it it's again run but with data from the response because you are setting $scope.camps = data;.
The reason <div ng-repeat="camp in CampaignsService.camps>{{camp.name}}</div> does not work is because of function variable scoping.
The this reference inside of your then callback is not the same as the this reference outside of it.
This will work and uses the common var self = this trick:
var self = this;
this.camps = [];
this.init = function () {
AjaxRequests.getCampaignsData().then(function (response) {
// here "this" is not the one from outside.
// "self" on the other hand is!
self.camps = response.campaigns;
});
};
Related
I have been working with wrapping my head around the "angularjs" way of thinking (Angular 1) and I have a relatively ok grasp as I work my way through a small personal project. I am at a bit of a roadblock, not because I cannot get it to work, but I would like to know what the proper way to set up the data in my application.
The basic situation is this:
I have 3 json files:
categories.json
products.json
vendors.json
These hold the data (which I will fetch from a database later but am simplifying for now).
I basically need to load the data from all three of these files so that I can form a variable holding all "Products" (which is a JS class I declared separately).
I started off by storing the data inside one controller (relevant code below):
myApp.controller('productListController', ['$scope', '$http', '$q', function ($scope, $http, $q) {
var promises = [];
promises.push(getCategories($http));
promises.push(getVendors($http));
promises.push(getProducts($http));
$q.all(promises).then(function (response) {
//categories = response[0];
//vendors = response[1];
//products = response[2];
$scope.products = createProductList(response);
$scope.vendors = response[1].data;
$scope.vendorChecked = getCheckedVendors($scope.vendors);
})
This worked fine but I realized that I need this data in other views, which led me to try to move this code into a service.
The problem I had when doing this is that I do not know of a way for the controller to know that the service is done fetching the data so that I can then save it in the ProductListController $scope.
I would need to have a way to for example:
myApp.service('ProductService', ['$http', '$q', function ($http, $q) {
self = this;
var promises = [];
promises.push(getCategories($http));
promises.push(getVendors($http));
promises.push(getProducts($http));
$q.all(promises).then(function (response) {
//These three I would like to update in ProductListController
//when it is done.
self.products = createProductList(response);
self.vendors = response[1].data;
self.vendorChecked = getCheckedVendors(self.vendors);
})
Is this the correct approach to take? If so, how can I let the controller know that the service is done fetching the data and save for example:
$scope.products = ProductService.products;
$scope.vendors = ProductService.vendors;
$scope.categories = ProductService.categories;
Is this even the correct approach? Another approach I thought of was to use a factory instead of a service. Then I had another problem because I had for example:
return {
getProducts: function() {
//http get request code in here
return promise
},
getVendors: function() {
//http get request code in here
return promise
},
getCategories: function() {
//http get request code in here
return promise
},
getAllData: function () {
//in here I want to use the three promises in the 3 functions above
//but I am not able to call them from here. If I was able to do that
//then I could call this method from ProductListController and get the
//data that way.
}
I am sorry if this is long but I wanted to describe the different things I tried. I know I can make it work but I want to learn the right way, or a couple of right ways.
It is better to always return promise:
var promises = [];
promises.push(getCategories($http));
promises.push(getVendors($http));
promises.push(getProducts($http));
return $q.all(promises)
If you also not satisfied that in each controller you should call createProductList,getCheckedVendors - consider putting this tranforms to $http transformResponce https://docs.angularjs.org/api/ng/service/$http.
Or you can create your own promise. (Using $q.defer https://docs.angularjs.org/api/ng/service/$q).
Using servie or factory actually doesnt matter. This is factory:
var factory = {};
factory.getProducts: function() {
return promise
}
factory.getCategories: function() {
return promise
}
factory.getVendors: function() {
return promise
}
factory.getAllData: function () {
var promises = [];
promises.push(factory.getProducts());
promises.push(factory.getCategories());
promises.push(factory.getVendors());
return $q.all(promises)
}
return factory;
And in controler you just have:
MyFactory.getAllData().then(...)
Please consider the following angularjs code for a controller:
(function (app) {
var controller = function ($scope, $state, datacontext) {
$scope.$parent.manageTitle = "Account Management";
$scope.accounts = [];
var init = function () {
getRecords();
};
var getRecords = function () {
return datacontext.getAccounts().then(function (data) {
$scope.$apply(function () {
$scope.accounts = data;
});
});
};
init();
};
app.controller("accountsCtrl", ["$scope", "$state", "datacontext", controller]);
})(angular.module("app"));
Removing the $scope.$apply wrapper and leaving just the "$scope.accounts = data" in the getRecords method breaks the code. The data is retrieved but the ng-repeat directive in the html is not automatically updated. I'm trying to get my arms around the entire $apply/$digest model, but it sure seems to be that the $apply should NOT be required in this case.
Am I doing something wrong?
Thanks.
<------------------------------------------ EDIT ---------------------------------------->
Ok, thanks for the responses. Here is the datacontext. It uses Breeze. I still can't figure out what the problem is - - I just don't see why $apply is required in the code, above.
(function (app) {
var datacontext = function () {
'use strict';
breeze.config.initializeAdapterInstance('modelLibrary', 'backingStore', true);
breeze.config.initializeAdapterInstance("ajax", "angular", true);
breeze.NamingConvention.camelCase.setAsDefault();
var service;
var manager = new breeze.EntityManager('api/ProximityApi');
var entityQuery = breeze.EntityQuery;
var queryFailed = function (error) {
};
var querySuccess = function (data) {
return data.results;
};
var getAccounts = function () {
var orderBy = 'accountName';
return entityQuery.from('Accounts')
.select('id, accountName')
.orderBy(orderBy)
.using(manager)
.execute()
.then(querySuccess, queryFailed);
};
service = {
getAccounts: getAccounts
};
return service;
};
app.factory('datacontext', [datacontext]);
})(angular.module('app'));
Thanks again!
Thanks for your answers. Jared - you're right on the money. By default, Breeze does not use angular $q promises, but uses third-party Q.js promises instead. Therefore, I needed $apply to synchronize the VM to the view. Recently however, the Breeze folks created angular.breeze.js, which allows the Breeze code to use angular promises, instead. By including the angular.breeze module in the application, all Breeze code will use native angular promises and $http instead.
This solved my problem and I could remove the $apply call.
See: http://www.breezejs.com/documentation/breeze-angular-service
The reason that you need to use the $apply function is the result of using Breeze to to return the data. the $apply function is used to get angular to run a digest on all the internal watches and update the scope accordingly. This is not needed when all changes occur in the angular scope as it does this digest automatically. In your code, because you are using Breeze the changes are taking place outside the angular scope, thus you will need to get angular to manually run the digest, and this is true for anything that takes place out side of angular (jQuery, other frameworks ect...). It is true that Breeze is using promises to update the data, however Angular does not know how to handle the changes after the promise returns because it is out side the scope. If you were using an angular service with promises then the view would be updated automatically. If your code is working correctly as is then it would be the correct way to use $apply in this way.
The only thing I might suggest is to change the way you are calling the apply to make sure that it will only run if another digest is not currently in progress as this can cause digest errors. I suggest you call the function as such:
if(!$scope.$$phase){$scope.$apply(function () {
$scope.accounts = data;
});
Or the other option would be to write a custom wrapper around the $apply function like this SafeApply
I have a factory called "Server" which contains my methods for interaction with the server (get/put/post/delete..). I managed to login and get all data successfully when I had all my code in my controller. Now that I want to separate this code and restructure it a little bit I ran into problems. I can still login and I also get data - but data is just printed; I'm not sure how to access the data in controller? I saw some ".then" instead of ".success" used here and there across the web, but I don't know how exactly.
This is my factory: (included in services.js)
app.factory('Server', ['$http', function($http) {
return {
// this works as it should, login works correctly
login: function(email,pass) {
return $http.get('mywebapiurl/server.php?email='+email+'&password='+pass').success(function(data) {
console.log("\nLOGIN RESPONSE: "+JSON.stringify(data));
if(data.Status !== "OK")
// login fail
console.log("Login FAIL...");
else
// success
console.log("Login OK...");
});
},
// intentional blank data parameter below (server configured this way for testing purposes)
getAllData: function() {
return $http.get('mywebapiurl/server.php?data=').success(function(data) {
console.log("\nDATA FROM SERVER: \n"+data); // here correct data in JSON string format are printed
});
},
};
}]);
This is my controller:
app.controller("MainController", ['$scope', 'Server', function($scope, Server){
Server.login(); // this logins correctly
$scope.data = Server.getAllData(); // here I want to get data returned by the server, now I get http object with all the methods etc etc.
…. continues …
How do I get data that was retrieved with $http within a factory to be accessible in controller? I only have one controller.
Thanks for any help, I'm sure there must be an easy way of doing this. Or am I perhaps taking a wrong way working this out?
EDIT: I also need to be able to call factory functions from views with ng-click for instance. Now I can do this like this:
// this is a method in controller
$scope.updateContacts = function(){
$http.get('mywebapiURL/server.php?mycontacts=').success(function(data) {
$scope.contacts = data;
});
};
and make a call in a view with ng-click="updateContacts()". See how $scope.contacts gets new data in the above function. How am I supposed to do this with .then method?(assigning returned data to variable)
My question asked straight-forwardly:
Lets say I need parts of controller code separated from it (so it doesn't get all messy), like some functions that are available throughout all $scope. What is the best way to accomplish this in AngularJS? Maybe it's not services as I thought …
The trick is to use a promise in your service to proxy the results.
The $http service returns a promise that you can resolve using then with a list or success and error to handle those conditions respectively.
This block of code shows handling the result of the call:
var deferred = $q.defer();
$http.get(productsEndpoint).success(function(result) {
deferred.resolve(result);
}).error(function(result) { deferred.reject(result); });
return deferred.promise;
The code uses the Angular $q service to create a promise. When the $http call is resolved then the promise is used to return information to your controller. The controller handles it like this:
app.controller("myController", ["$scope", "myService", function($scope, myService) {
$scope.data = { status: "Not Loaded." };
myService.getData().then(function(data) { $scope.data = data; });
}]);
(Another function can be passed to then if you want to explicitly handle the rejection).
That closes the loop: a service that uses a promise to return the data, and a controller that calls the service and chains the promise for the result. I have a full fiddle online here: http://jsfiddle.net/HhFwL/
You can change the end point, right now it just points to a generic OData end point to fetch some products data.
More on $http: http://docs.angularjs.org/api/ng.%24http
More on $q: http://docs.angularjs.org/api/ng.%24q
$http.get retuns a HttpPromise Object
Server.getAllData().then(function(results){
$scope.data = results;
})
I am using some data which is from a RESTful service in multiple pages.
So I am using angular factories for that. So, I required to get the data once from the server, and everytime I am getting the data with that defined service. Just like a global variables. Here is the sample:
var myApp = angular.module('myservices', []);
myApp.factory('myService', function($http) {
$http({method:"GET", url:"/my/url"}).success(function(result){
return result;
});
});
In my controller I am using this service as:
function myFunction($scope, myService) {
$scope.data = myService;
console.log("data.name"+$scope.data.name);
}
Its working fine for me as per my requirements.
But the problem here is, when I reloaded in my webpage the service will gets called again and requests for server. If in between some other function executes which is dependent on the "defined service", It's giving the error like "something" is undefined. So I want to wait in my script till the service is loaded. How can I do that? Is there anyway do that in angularjs?
You should use promises for async operations where you don't know when it will be completed. A promise "represents an operation that hasn't completed yet, but is expected in the future." (https://developer.mozilla.org/en/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Promise)
An example implementation would be like:
myApp.factory('myService', function($http) {
var getData = function() {
// Angular $http() and then() both return promises themselves
return $http({method:"GET", url:"/my/url"}).then(function(result){
// What we return here is the data that will be accessible
// to us after the promise resolves
return result.data;
});
};
return { getData: getData };
});
function myFunction($scope, myService) {
var myDataPromise = myService.getData();
myDataPromise.then(function(result) {
// this is only run after getData() resolves
$scope.data = result;
console.log("data.name"+$scope.data.name);
});
}
Edit: Regarding Sujoys comment that
What do I need to do so that myFuction() call won't return till .then() function finishes execution.
function myFunction($scope, myService) {
var myDataPromise = myService.getData();
myDataPromise.then(function(result) {
$scope.data = result;
console.log("data.name"+$scope.data.name);
});
console.log("This will get printed before data.name inside then. And I don't want that.");
}
Well, let's suppose the call to getData() took 10 seconds to complete. If the function didn't return anything in that time, it would effectively become normal synchronous code and would hang the browser until it completed.
With the promise returning instantly though, the browser is free to continue on with other code in the meantime. Once the promise resolves/fails, the then() call is triggered. So it makes much more sense this way, even if it might make the flow of your code a bit more complex (complexity is a common problem of async/parallel programming in general after all!)
for people new to this you can also use a callback for example:
In your service:
.factory('DataHandler',function ($http){
var GetRandomArtists = function(data, callback){
$http.post(URL, data).success(function (response) {
callback(response);
});
}
})
In your controller:
DataHandler.GetRandomArtists(3, function(response){
$scope.data.random_artists = response;
});
I was having the same problem and none if these worked for me. Here is what did work though...
app.factory('myService', function($http) {
var data = function (value) {
return $http.get(value);
}
return { data: data }
});
and then the function that uses it is...
vm.search = function(value) {
var recieved_data = myService.data(value);
recieved_data.then(
function(fulfillment){
vm.tags = fulfillment.data;
}, function(){
console.log("Server did not send tag data.");
});
};
The service isn't that necessary but I think its a good practise for extensibility. Most of what you will need for one will for any other, especially when using APIs. Anyway I hope this was helpful.
FYI, this is using Angularfire so it may vary a bit for a different service or other use but should solve the same isse $http has. I had this same issue only solution that fit for me the best was to combine all services/factories into a single promise on the scope. On each route/view that needed these services/etc to be loaded I put any functions that require loaded data inside the controller function i.e. myfunct() and the main app.js on run after auth i put
myservice.$loaded().then(function() {$rootScope.myservice = myservice;});
and in the view I just did
ng-if="myservice" ng-init="somevar=myfunct()"
in the first/parent view element/wrapper so the controller can run everything inside
myfunct()
without worrying about async promises/order/queue issues. I hope that helps someone with the same issues I had.
I have a controller like this:
function MyCtrl($scope) {
$scope.doSomething = function(){
alert("Do something!");
}
}
And I have multiple views which depend on this (ie multiple of the below):
<div ng-controller="MyCtrl">
...
</div>
The problem is, the data the controller depends on needs to be loaded in the background (the controller does not load that data), and a callback (dataIsReady()) will be called after the data is ready.
function dataIsReady(){
// TODO: call the doSomething() function
}
Now, I want to basically call the doSomething() function, which is inside MyCtrl, from the dataIsReady() function. How can I do that?
I think what you need is a data service, which you can then inject into your controller. You can call a function on your data service which will handle the retrieval of the data and return a "promise" which can then be used to trigger your callback function when the data has loaded.
Have a look at the following code which is a slightly modified version from egghead.io:
Plunker Demo (w/ local storage): http://plnkr.co/edit/9w2jTg?p=preview
var myApp = angular.module('myApp', []);
myApp.factory('AvengersService', function ($http) {
var AvengersService = {
getAsyncCast: function () {
// $http returns a promise, which has a then function, which also returns a promise
var promise = $http.get("avengers.json") // or some JSON service
.then(function (response) {
// The 'then' function here is an opportunity to modify the response
// The return value gets picked up by the 'then' in the controller.
return response.data;
});
// Return the promise to the controller
return promise;
}
};
return AvengersService;
});
myApp.controller('AvengersCtrl', function($scope, AvengersService) {
// Call the async method and then do something when the data is retrieved
AvengersService.getAsyncCast()
.then(function (asyncData) {
// Callback logic that depends on the data goes in here
console.info("Cast pulled async.");
$scope.avengers.cast = asyncData;
});
});
Hope that helps.
Notice: This approach in this answer is terribly wrong, one should not access to the scope of a controller outside of angular, or outside of controller at all. This would also be terribly slow if you try to call it several times. Other than that, it is fine. I am giving this answer because it is also the simplest way. I would never use that kind of code in production, though. The appropriate way is to write a service to communicate with the controller.
Given that you have defined $scope.doSomething in MyCtrl:
var scp = angular.element('[ng-controller="MyCtrl"]').scope();
scp.doSomething();
Will call doSomething method defined in the controller.