I am a bit new to Angularjs. In Chrome, for number type input fields, pressing on up and down key arrow increases/decreases the entered value. It needs to be disabled. Any ideas or help in how it can be done?
I tried using jQuery: $(":input").bind('keyup mouseup', function () but the ng-model binding is not updating. Might be because the angular js doesn't recognize the change made with jQuery.
Model won't change inside jquery event.Use ng-keypress event in angularjs
If you need to disable it permanently better do it another way, use regular text input but restrict other chars than numbers.
<input type="text" ng-pattern="/^[0-9]*$/" />
Check out ngPattern docs
You can use ng-model directive to access the value of input in controller, and ng-disabled directive to control an input state. Hopefully the following demo may be of some help:
var app = angular.module('demo', []);
app.controller('DemoCtrl', function($scope) {
$scope.myNumber = 0;
$scope.isDisabled = false;
$scope.toggle = function() {
$scope.isDisabled = !$scope.isDisabled;
};
});
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/angular.js/1.7.5/angular.min.js"></script>
<div ng-app="demo">
<div ng-controller="DemoCtrl">
<input type="number" ng-model="myNumber" ng-disabled="isDisabled"/>
<button ng-click="toggle()">Disable/Enable</button>
</div>
</div>
I have a formgroup like below:
this.myform = this.fb.group({
mydata: ''
});
I was able to set the data with formgroup setValue but in rendering the values in HTML, the option was not selected.
This is the HTML:
<div *ngFor="let item of (items$ | async); index as i; first as first">
<input type="radio" id="{{item.itemId}}" name="test" value="{{item.itemId}}" [formControl]="myform.controls.mydata"
selected = "(items$ | async).length ===1">
</div>
This doesnot select the first input label in HTML but in typescript the form is valid .
Use the setValue() method to set a new value for an individual control. The setValue() method strictly adheres to the structure of the form group and replaces the entire value for the control.
this.myform.setValue({ mydata: 'yourData' });
use the patchValue to set the value for the whole form
this.myform .patchValue({ mydata: 'yourData' });
I have an Angular form. The fields are validated using the ng-pattern attribute. I also have a reset button. I'm using the Ui.Utils Event Binder to handle the reset event like so:
<form name="searchForm" id="searchForm" ui-event="{reset: 'reset(searchForm)'}" ng-submit="search()">
<div>
<label>
Area Code
<input type="tel" name="areaCode" ng-model="areaCode" ng-pattern="/^([0-9]{3})?$/">
</label>
<div ng-messages="searchForm.areaCode.$error">
<div class="error" ng-message="pattern">The area code must be three digits</div>
</div>
</div>
<div>
<label>
Phone Number
<input type="tel" name="phoneNumber" ng-model="phoneNumber" ng-pattern="/^([0-9]{7})?$/">
</label>
<div ng-messages="searchForm.phoneNumber.$error">
<div class="error" ng-message="pattern">The phone number must be seven digits</div>
</div>
</div>
<br>
<div>
<button type="reset">Reset</button>
<button type="submit" ng-disabled="searchForm.$invalid">Search</button>
</div>
</form>
As you can see, when the form is reset it calls the reset method on the $scope. Here's what the entire controller looks like:
angular.module('app').controller('mainController', function($scope) {
$scope.resetCount = 0;
$scope.reset = function(form) {
form.$setPristine();
form.$setUntouched();
$scope.resetCount++;
};
$scope.search = function() {
alert('Searching');
};
});
I'm calling form.$setPristine() and form.$setUntouched, following the advice from another question here on Stack Overflow. The only reason I added the counter was to prove that the code is being called (which it is).
The problem is that even after reseting the form, the validation messages don't go away. You can see the full code on Plunker. Here's a screenshot showing that the errors don't go away:
I started with the comment from #Brett and built upon it. I actually have multiple forms and each form has many fields (more than just the two shown). So I wanted a general solution.
I noticed that the Angular form object has a property for each control (input, select, textarea, etc) as well as some other Angular properties. Each of the Angular properties, though, begins with a dollar sign ($). So I ended up doing this (including the comment for the benefit of other programmers):
$scope.reset = function(form) {
// Each control (input, select, textarea, etc) gets added as a property of the form.
// The form has other built-in properties as well. However it's easy to filter those out,
// because the Angular team has chosen to prefix each one with a dollar sign.
// So, we just avoid those properties that begin with a dollar sign.
let controlNames = Object.keys(form).filter(key => key.indexOf('$') !== 0);
// Set each control back to undefined. This is the only way to clear validation messages.
// Calling `form.$setPristine()` won't do it (even though you wish it would).
for (let name of controlNames) {
let control = form[name];
control.$setViewValue(undefined);
}
form.$setPristine();
form.$setUntouched();
};
$scope.search = {areaCode: xxxx, phoneNumber: yyyy}
Structure all models in your form in one place like above, so you can clear it like this:
$scope.search = angular.copy({});
After that you can just call this for reset the validation:
$scope.search_form.$setPristine();
$scope.search_form.$setUntouched();
$scope.search_form.$rollbackViewValue();
There doesn't seem to be an easy way to reset the $errors in angular. The best way would probably be to reload the current page to start with a new form. Alternatively you have to remove all $error manually with this script:
form.$setPristine(true);
form.$setUntouched(true);
// iterate over all from properties
angular.forEach(form, function(ctrl, name) {
// ignore angular fields and functions
if (name.indexOf('$') != 0) {
// iterate over all $errors for each field
angular.forEach(ctrl.$error, function(value, name) {
// reset validity
ctrl.$setValidity(name, null);
});
}
});
$scope.resetCount++;
You can add a validation flag and show or hide errors according to its value with ng-if or ng-show in your HTML. The form has a $valid flag you can send to your controller.
ng-if will remove or recreate the element to the DOM, while ng-show will add it but won't show it (depending on the flag value).
EDIT: As pointed by Michael, if form is disabled, the way I pointed won't work because the form is never submitted. Updated the code accordingly.
HTML
<form name="searchForm" id="searchForm" ui-event="{reset: 'reset(searchForm)'}" ng-submit="search()">
<div>
<label>
Area Code
<input type="tel" name="areaCode" ng-model="areaCode" ng-pattern="/^([0-9]{3})?$/">
</label>
<div ng-messages="searchForm.areaCode.$error">
<div class="error" ng-message="pattern" ng-if="searchForm.areaCode.$dirty">The area code must be three digits</div>
</div>
</div>
<div>
<label>
Phone Number
<input type="tel" name="phoneNumber" ng-model="phoneNumber" ng-pattern="/^([0-9]{7})?$/">
</label>
<div ng-messages="searchForm.phoneNumber.$error">
<div class="error" ng-message="pattern" ng-if="searchForm.phoneNumber.$dirty">The phone number must be seven digits</div>
</div>
</div>
<br>
<div>
<button type="reset">Reset</button>
<button type="submit" ng-disabled="searchForm.$invalid">Search</button>
</div>
</form>
JS
$scope.search = function() {
alert('Searching');
};
$scope.reset = function(form) {
form.$setPristine();
form.$setUntouched();
$scope.resetCount++;
};
Codepen with working solution: http://codepen.io/anon/pen/zGPZoB
It looks like I got to do the right behavior at reset. Unfortunately, using the standard reset failed. I also do not include the library ui-event. So my code is a little different from yours, but it does what you need.
<form name="searchForm" id="searchForm" ng-submit="search()">
pristine = {{searchForm.$pristine}} valid ={{searchForm.$valid}}
<div>
<label>
Area Code
<input type="tel" required name="areaCode" ng-model="obj.areaCode" ng-pattern="/^([0-9]{3})?$/" ng-model-options="{ allowInvalid: true }">
</label>
<div ng-messages="searchForm.areaCode.$error">
<div class="error" ng-message="pattern">The area code must be three digits</div>
<div class="error" ng-message="required">The area code is required</div>
</div>
</div>
<div>
<label>
Phone Number
<input type="tel" required name="phoneNumber" ng-model="obj.phoneNumber" ng-pattern="/^([0-9]{7})?$/" ng-model-options="{ allowInvalid: true }">
</label>
<div ng-messages="searchForm.phoneNumber.$error">
<div class="error" ng-message="pattern">The phone number must be seven digits</div>
<div class="error" ng-message="required">The phone number is required</div>
</div>
</div>
<br>
<div>
<button ng-click="reset(searchForm)" type="reset">Reset</button>
<button type="submit" ng-disabled="searchForm.$invalid">Search</button>
</div>
</form>
And JS:
$scope.resetCount = 0;
$scope.obj = {};
$scope.reset = function(form_) {
$scope.resetCount++;
$scope.obj = {};
form_.$setPristine();
form_.$setUntouched();
console.log($scope.resetCount);
};
$scope.search = function() {
alert('Searching');
};
Live example on jsfiddle.
Note the directive ng-model-options="{allowinvalid: true}". Use it necessarily, or until the entry field will not be valid, the model value is not recorded. Therefore, the reset will not operate.
P.S. Put value (areaCode, phoneNumber) on the object simplifies purification.
Following worked for me
let form = this.$scope.myForm;
let controlNames = Object.keys(form).filter(key => key.indexOf('$') !== 0);
for (let name of controlNames) {
let control = form [name];
control.$error = {};
}
In Short: to get rid of ng-messages errors you need to clear out the $error object for each form item.
further to #battmanz 's answer, but without using any ES6 syntax to support older browsers.
$scope.resetForm = function (form) {
try {
var controlNames = Object.keys(form).filter(function (key) { return key.indexOf('$') !== 0 });
console.log(controlNames);
for (var x = 0; x < controlNames.length; x++) {
form[controlNames[x]].$setViewValue(undefined);
}
form.$setPristine();
form.$setUntouched();
} catch (e) {
console.log('Error in Reset');
console.log(e);
}
};
I had the same problem and tried to do battmanz solution (accepted answer).
I'm pretty sure his answer is really good, but however for me it wasn't working.
I am using ng-model to bind data, and angular material library for the inputs and ng-message directives for error message , so maybe what I will say will be useful only for people using the same configuration.
I took a lot of look at the formController object in javascript, in fact there is a lot of $ angular function as battmanz noted, and there is in addition, your fields names, which are object with some functions in its fields.
So what is clearing your form ?
Usually I see a form as a json object, and all the fields are binded to a key of this json object.
//lets call here this json vm.form
vm.form = {};
//you should have something as ng-model = "vm.form.name" in your view
So at first to clear the form I just did callback of submiting form :
vm.form = {};
And as explained in this question, ng-messages won't disappear with that, that's really bad.
When I used battmanz solution as he wrote it, the messages didn't appear anymore, but the fields were not empty anymore after submiting, even if I wrote
vm.form = {};
And I found out it was normal, because using his solution actually remove the model binding from the form, because it sets all the fields to undefined.
So the text was still in the view because somehow there wan't any binding anymore and it decided to stay in the HTML.
So what did I do ?
Actually I just clear the field (setting the binding to {}), and used just
form.$setPristine();
form.$setUntouched();
Actually it seems logical, since the binding is still here, the values in the form are now empty, and angular ng-messages directive is triggering only if the form is not untouched, so I think it's normal after all.
Final (very simple) code is that :
function reset(form) {
form.$setPristine();
form.$setUntouched();
};
A big problem I encountered with that :
Only once, the callback seems to have fucked up somewhere, and somehow the fields weren't empty (it was like I didn't click on the submit button).
When I clicked again, the date sent was empty. That even more weird because my submit button is supposed to be disabled when a required field is not filled with the good pattern, and empty is certainly not a good one.
I don't know if my way of doing is the best or even correct, if you have any critic/suggestion or any though about the problem I encountered, please let me know, I always love to step up in angularJS.
Hope this will help someone and sorry for the bad english.
You can pass your loginForm object into the function ng-click="userCtrl.login(loginForm)
and in the function call
this.login = function (loginForm){
loginForm.$setPristine();
loginForm.$setUntouched();
}
So none of the answers were completely working for me. Esp, clearing the view value, so I combined all the answers clearing view value, clearing errors and clearing the selection with j query(provided the fields are input and name same as model name)
var modelNames = Object.keys($scope.form).filter(key => key.indexOf('$') !== 0);
modelNames.forEach(function(name){
var model = $scope.form[name];
model.$setViewValue(undefined);
jq('input[name='+name+']').val('');
angular.forEach(model.$error, function(value, name) {
// reset validity
model.$setValidity(name, null);
});
});
$scope.form.$setPristine();
$scope.form.$setUntouched();
I have several <input> fields within a <form>. Angular takes the value from those fields regardless of the <form> (which is actually there only for Bootstrap to apply the right styles to inner fields).
Now, I want to be able to reset the fields, and so get Angular update the output associated to them as well. However, a regular <input type="reset"/> button is not working. It resets the values of all the <input> fields, but Angular is not refreshing the output that is based on the fields after it.
Is there any way to tell Angular to refresh the outputs based on the current state of the fields? Something like a ng-click="refresh()"?
Let's say you have your model called address. You have this HTML form.
<input [...] ng-model="address.name" />
<input [...] ng-model="address.street" />
<input [...] ng-model="address.postalCode" />
<input [...] ng-model="address.town" />
<input [...] ng-model="address.country" />
And you have this in your angular controller.
$scope.reset = function() {
$scope.defaultAddress = {};
$scope.resetAddress = function() {
$scope.address = angular.copy($scope.defaultAddress);
}
};
JSFiddle available here.
You should have your values tied to a model.
<input ng-model="myvalue">
Output: {{myvalue}}
$scope.refresh = function(){
delete $scope.myvalue;
}
JSFiddle: http://jsfiddle.net/V2LAv/
Also check out an example usage of $pristine here:
http://plnkr.co/edit/815Bml?p=preview
I have a ng-repeat to loop my object value to view.
Then I want to have a button to add new blank element to the last of ng-repeat value.
How can I do this in angular?
My data is json object. I tried
In controller
$scope.objs = {'a': 'a', 'b':'b'};
In view
{{Object.keys(objs).length}};
But nothing show in view.
Update
<div ng-repeat="docstep in docs.docsteps" class="docstep">
{{docstep.text}}
</div>
Then I want to get the length of objects so I can .length + 1 in the button click
But I have no idea how to get objects length. Or is there any better idea?
Bind a click handler to the button using ng-click:
<div ng-repeat="docstep in docs.docsteps" class="docstep">
<input type="text" value="{{docstep.text}}">
</div>
<button ng-click="addNew()">Add another input</button>
When this button is clicked. It will add another blank input
<br>Which the new input will be docstep3
This is how your JS should look:
var myApp = angular.module('myApp',[]);
myApp.run(function($rootScope){
$rootScope.docs = {
"docsteps" : {
"docstep1" : {
"text" : "a"
},
"docstep2" : {
"text" : "b"
}
}
}
var c = 2;
$rootScope.addNew = function(){
count++;
$rootScope.docs.docsteps["docstep"+count] = {"text":count}
}
});
NOTE: You should use ng-app to define work area for angular and use controllers to reside the models(docs) and define the behaviour of your view (addNew).
I took your ng-repeat and made it work. Notice I put your object in the $rootScope but you can apply the same object to any scope that your ng-repeat is in.
JS
var myApp = angular.module('myApp',[]);
myApp.run(function($rootScope){
$rootScope.docs={docsteps:[{text:'A'},{text:'B'},{text:'C'}]};
});
JSFIDDLE: http://jsfiddle.net/mac1175/Snn9p/