I\'m displaying a list of thumbnails with this code:
I was having the same issue, using the track by $index finally resolved the problem for me. At first I didn't think it did, as I used it directly in the image tags where another ng-repeat was. Once I put it in the parent div (as well) on ng-repeat it worked:
<div ng-repeat="item in blah track by $index">
<!-- stuff -->
<!-- later in this div: -->
<img data-ng-repeat="dict in item.blah track by $index" class="smallPics ng-cloak" src="{[dict.path]}"></img>
<!-- and the rest is blah-istory -->
You can use track by
in your ng-repeat
with a unique identifier. If I suppose your channel object has an id, you can do :
<div class ="channel" ng-repeat="channel in UIModel.channels track by channel.id"></div>
The tracking avoids the complete DOM deletion and recreation at every updates, as Angular will be able to track if the element is the same as previously and will keep the DOM element.
As a note:
If using track by $index
doesn't update the DOM with the new values,
consider using a track by 'the properties you expect to change'
just be careful to avoid ngDupe
errors
e.g:
<div ng-repeat="channel in UIModel.channels track by customExp(channel)">
. . .
$scope.customExp = function(chan) {
return chan.id+chan.thumbnail_url; // this has to ensure uniqueness
}
or
<div ng-repeat="channel in UIModel.channels track by channel.id+channel.thubnail_url">
To go along with @cexbrayat's answer, if you don't have any IDs you can also just associated it and track by $index
. Which is an internal iteration # during an ng-repeat.
<div ng-repeat="channel in UIModel.channels track by $index"></div>
Try the answers from @Mark Pieszak and @cexbrayat first, however if you are using ngAnimate
in your application, they may not completely solve your problem.
In addition to:
<div class="channel" ng-repeat="channel in UIModel.channels track by channel.id"></div>
I needed to add the following CSS to disable animation for this ng-repeat
:
.channel .ng-leave, .channel .ng-leave-active {
display: none !important;
}
.channel .ng-move, .channel .ng-move-active {
display: none !important;
}
This ensures that once the animation starts, the item is immediately hidden. The alternatives are to actually use an animation, or to disable the animation on the element in code with $animate.enabled('div.channel', false);
.