问题
I have an element whose visibility is toggled by ng-show
. I'm also using CSS animations - the automatic ones from ng-animate - on this element to animate its entry.
The element will either contain an image or a video.
In the case that the element contains a video, I want to play it, but I don't want to play the video until it's finished animating in.
As such, I was wondering if there's an easy way to bind a callback to the end of a CSS animation in AngularJS?
The docs reference a doneCallback
, but I can't see a way to specify it...
One workaround(?) I have thought of is $watch
ing element.hasClass("ng-hide-add-active")
and waiting for it to fire with (true, false)
, implying it's just been removed..
Is there a nicer way?
回答1:
@michael-charemza answer worked great for me. If you are using Angular 1.3 they changed the promise a little. I got stuck on this for a little bit but here is the change that got it to work:
if (show) {
$animate.removeClass(element, 'ng-hide').then(scope.afterShow);
}
if (!show) {
$animate.addClass(element, 'ng-hide').then(scope.afterHide);
}
Plunker: Code Example
回答2:
As @zeroflagL has suggested, a custom directive to replace ngShow
is probably the way to go. You can use &
to pass callbacks into the directive, which can be called after the animations have finished. For consistency, the animations are done by adding and removing the ng-hide
class, which is the same method used by the usual ngShow directive:
app.directive('myShow', function($animate) {
return {
scope: {
'myShow': '=',
'afterShow': '&',
'afterHide': '&'
},
link: function(scope, element) {
scope.$watch('myShow', function(show, oldShow) {
if (show) {
$animate.removeClass(element, 'ng-hide', scope.afterShow);
}
if (!show) {
$animate.addClass(element, 'ng-hide', scope.afterHide);
}
});
}
}
})
Example use of this listening to a scope variable show
would be:
<div my-show="show" after-hide="afterHide()" after-show="afterShow()">...</div>
Because this is adding/removing the ng-hide class, the points about animating from the docs about ngShow are still valid, and you need to add display: block !important
to the CSS.
You can see an example of this in action at this Plunker.
回答3:
@michal-charemza solution works great, but the directive creates an isolated scope, so in some cases it cannot be a direct replacement for the default ng-show directive.
I have modified it a bit, so that it does not create any new scopes and can be used interchangeably with the ng-show directive.
app.directive('myShow', function($animate) {
return {
link: function(scope, element, attrs) {
scope.$watch(attrs['myShow'], function(show, oldShow) {
if (show) {
$animate.removeClass(element, 'ng-hide').then(function(){
scope.$apply(attrs['myAfterShow']);
});
} else {
$animate.addClass(element, 'ng-hide').then(function(){
scope.$apply(attrs['myAfterHide']);
});
}
});
}
}
})
Usage:
<div my-show="show" my-after-hide="afterHide()" my-after-show="afterShow()">...</div>
Plunker
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/20921622/running-code-after-an-angularjs-animation-has-completed