From my understanding of runOutsideAngular(), if I need to run something that won\'t trigger the Angular change detection, I need to use this function. My code is not workin
[In short] you need to change one line in your current code
onClick() {
this._ngZone.runOutsideAngular(() => {
setTimeout(()=>this.num = 2,0); // instead of this.num = 2;
}}));
}
now if you click the on the <button>
, this.num
will become 2
, but you won't see any change in the UI (a temporary inconsistency between view and model)
[Explanation] without runOutsideAngular()
, async functions like addEventListener()
or setTimeout()
behaves differently (monkey patched). their callbacks will try to update UI with Angular after running user's code.
For example, you can treat (click)="onClick()"
as:
addEventListener("click",function modifiedCallback(){
onClick();
updateUIifModelChanges(); //call to Angular
})
In order to not triggered UI update we need to satisfy the following two conditions:
onClick
(so, modify inside setTimeout()
)updateUIifModelChanges
(call setTimeout()
inside runOutsideAngular
)[More] of cause, the explanation I gave is a very very...simplified version of what happens. setTimeout()
has the same function signature whether it's running inside runOutsideAngular()
or not. The reason that it behaves differently is because it's running in a different Zone
...
constructor(
private ngZone: NgZone
){
ngZone.runOutsideAngular(() => {
setInterval(()=>{
this.num= new Date().Format('yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss');
},1000);
});
}
...
Using ngZone.run
is a bit better than the setTimeout
solutions since it uses angular specific functionality. Run is meant to be used within ngZone.runOutsideAngular
functions.
From the docs:
Running functions via run allows you to reenter Angular zone from a task that was executed outside of the Angular zone (typically started via {@link #runOutsideAngular}).
This is actually a very practical example of say a button that increments a number by one but only triggers change detection when the number is even.
@Component({selector: 'my-cmp',
template: `<h1>{{num}}</h1>
<button (click)="onClick()">Change number</button>`})
class MyComponent implements OnChanges {
num = 1;
constructor(private _ngZone: NgZone ) {
}
onClick() {
this._ngZone.runOutsideAngular(() => {
if(this.num % 2 === 0){
// modifying the state here wont trigger change.
this.num++;
} else{
this._ngZone.run(() => {
this.num++;
})
}
}}));
}
}
If anything is causing change detection, and a bound event like (click)="onClick()"
does cause change detection, then Angular will detect the change.
runOutsideAngular
doesn't mean Angular won't see the change, it only means that the code run this way doesn't cause change detection, but because the click event already does, it's meaningless in your example.
If you want to prevent change detection then you can
1) subscribe on ngZone.onMicrotaskEmpty
like this:
import { NgZone, ChangeDetectorRef } from '@angular/core';
import 'rxjs/add/operator/first';
...
export class MyComponent {
constructor(private ngZone: NgZone, private cdRef: ChangeDetectorRef) {}
onClick() {
// to do something
this.cdRef.detach();
this.ngZone.onMicrotaskEmpty.first().subscribe(() => {
// reattach changeDetector after application.tick()
this.cdRef.reattach();
});
}
}
This handler will run after Application.tick
See also Plunker Example
2) use custom directive like this:
@Directive({
selector: '[outSideEventHandler]'
})
class OutSideEventHandlerDirective {
private handler: Function;
@Input() event: string = 'click'; // pass desired event
@Output('outSideEventHandler') emitter = new EventEmitter();
constructor(private ngZone: NgZone, private elRef: ElementRef) {}
ngOnInit() {
this.ngZone.runOutsideAngular(() => {
this.handler = $event => this.emitter.emit($event);
this.elRef.nativeElement.addEventListener(this.event, this.handler);
});
}
ngOnDestory() {
this.elRef.nativeElement.removeEventListener(this.event, this.handler);
}
}
and then in template you can write:
<button (outSideEventHandler)="onClick()">Click outside zone</button>
or
<button event="mousedown" (outSideEventHandler)="onClick()">Click outside zone</button>
Plunker
3) write custom DOM event handler as described in this article.
Other solutions see here: