Can we drag and drop md-list item or md-cards in angular material design using jQuery or other framework?
I can give a partial answer to this. It is not recommended to add jQuery to an Angular project. Angular is controller-centric while jQuery is focused on manipulating the DOM. They are really different approaches, and while you could possibly get something to work using jQuery and Angular together--it would tend to be a fragile and overly complex solution.
The same holds for Angular Material. It's not a great basis for jQuery operations.
That having been said, see also my comment on your question. I read through all the documentation on http://material.angularjs.org and found nothing that suggests built-in support for drag/drop operations in general nor for dragging cards around in a list.
I realize the framework is still pretty new but I am surprised to find that something as essential to the Material Design concept as dragging cards around a list simply wasn't addressed. So perhaps you and I both are confused or missing something that should be glaringly obvious.
Is there an equivalent directive for angular thats similar to collection-repeat for ionic? I'm looking for ways to do infinite scroll without taking too much of the dom. Tried the ngInfiniteScroll and the angular ui/ui-scroll.
Are you looking for directives that handle very large collections with decent performance?
I think what you're looking for is called Virtual Scroll. There are a few libraries that do it. I haven't used any yet, but check out angular-virtual-scroll or angular-vs-repeat.
Recently, in working with AngularJS, I really like many of the features, like creating custom abstract data factories, etc.
KendoUI also has similar features like MVVM, SPA routes, etc. that AngularJS offers, so I'm curious about what the benefits are of mixing the two (other than the rich UI features of KendoUI)?
-- Update --
I'm asking this question for clarification, and for those who may be slightly confused about the benefits of each, and why one would use both in a project, rather than one over the other.
For example - Javascript unit testing capabilities (simply done with Angular controllers, but have not seen anyone doing this with KendoUI).
It seems like Kendo is trying to do it all, but does UI best.
Thanks.
-- Update --
Since writing this question I have gone through and integrated the KendoUI grid with Angular using OData and have written a tutorial here at www.whatsinyourlunch.com on how to accomplish this, in hopes that this will be useful for others.
The stack is AngularJS, KendoUI, OData, WebAPI2, .Net MVC5, C#, Entity Framework accessed through a generic repository.
I know this is old but here is my two cents. The more you use Angular the more you will realize you don't need Kendo. The Kendo/Angular integration is a bit of a hack but it seems to get the job done. The only reason I find to use Kendo is the grid. I've tried the Angular grids out there and they are riddled with bugs and formatting issues.
I think it's important not to be a purist and to just use whatever combination of tools that accomplish what you need. I tend to try to move away from being dependent on paid commercial libraries but the grid is just solid. Any paid product will probably have more support and upkeep, as well as personal access to the development team (vs. well maintained free products from large companies or single developer projects that waste away). I have seen so many great free products get abandoned. However, if you want a great free grid and can't stomach paying Telerik $1000.00 for just a grid, DataTables.net is a great alternative and what I currently use.
You have to love Telerik's support which is the best reason to use their stuff in my opinion. They are lacking some things in Kendo like a good date range calendar, tag cloud, etc. The charts are also lacking compared to say Highcharts. I use the date range calendar from Keith Wood, although he doesn't seem to respond to emails. I found some great angular controls for other things like drop downs, etc. as well. I used to not understand why people use a hodge podge of stuff, but it is the best tool for the job that is important.
I personally would not go any further than using the rich UI features of KendoUI in Angular directives. The rest should be Angular. Or use KendoUI exclusively.
Mixing them works fine. You don't have to use all of the framework code (MVVM, etc.) included with Kendo and can just focus on the rich UI features. We use several of their controls, including a highly customized version of the grid. Angular is perfect for this because we built directives to wrap the Kendo controls and encapsulate the 80% configuration that happens every time so the developer could focus on the 20% that is different in their page/module/whatever. Our project successfully engages over 20 developers in a distributed team on a project with tens of thousands of lines of code and we've had great success using the UI features of Kendo with Angular.
On our current project we're using both Angular and Kendo (mainly for the grid). We didn't mix the two and this would also be my suggestion. Angular should be the one responsible for your application logic and Kendo should only be concerned with managing the widgets.
Kendo provides there own kendo-angular library, which contains directives for most of their widgets.
Here are a couple of points of my experience which doesn't favor the mixing of KendoUI with AngularJs:
Though there are kendo directives for AngularJs, a lot of UI related stuff will end up in the controller (configuration, events, complex templates) and it's difficult to keep jQuery out of it.
The initialization and display of kendo components does add a serious time penalty to each page (grid, tabstrip, ...)
Events and method arguments are not coherent across the kendo framework (i.e. select method of grid vs listview vs combobox)
The use of templates with the grid (or listview) or responding to grid events does not feel like AngularJs.
Components behave differently than the native controls they try to replace (i.e. event order and databinding of combobox vs native select)
As soon as the look and feel of the kendo components has to be customized, one has to become familiar with the CSS classes used by kendo.
The KendoUI grid is great, but if the project doesn't need it, there's nothing to be gained by mixing the two.
I think mixing of them is not a good approach. you should ask yourself a question "witch one is more required and useful in my project"
I had decided to use kendo beside angular because of its rich grid components. But I canceled it.
The main controls of kendoUI is grid. But you need to watch every element of it to have a complete binding and it make it slow. Also dataItem of a row in grid does not return the original data.
you need to watch paging, filtering , sorting ....
But for other controls of kendo we have fewer problems.
I've seen http://codef0rmer.github.io/angular-dragdrop/#/list, but this requires jQuery and jQuery UI. If possible, I'd like to not have those dependencies.
The AngularJS documentation SURPRISINGLY has an example of this on the Compiler page. Check it out. You may have to add to it, but it is a great simple example of how to write a directive to get the draggable functionality.
Yes, ngDraggable is designed to support drag-drop functionality without dependency of jQuery UI.
I did some spike and it worked well on PC browsers, however, it still has some UI issues on mobile so far. Here is a live demo.
I'm new to angular and been following the basic tutorials from their official site but I haven't see any tutorial about animating specifically view transition animations. What I want for example is for my current view to pan to the right to show the next view and hitting the back button pans to the left to reveal the previous view.
Does angular.js supports this out of the box? If it does, what is the proper or recommended way of doing it? Thanks a lot.
Angular 1.1.4, released just last night (4/3/2013) supports CSS animation. Though the documentation and examples are still a little scarce, you'll find a good introduction in this video presentation.
Angular doesn't provide animations (or much DOM manipulation at all, really) - those would have to be provided by a 3rd party (probably JQuery).
Since you're new to Angular I'd try to write the animations in a non-angular app, get them working, and then read up on Directives to integrate your work into your Angular app.
Full Tutorials here: http://www.yearofmoo.com/2013/08/remastered-animation-in-angularjs-1-2.html
Things has changed a little bit since 1.1.4