@ViewChild returns undefined

倾然丶 夕夏残阳落幕 提交于 2019-12-12 09:36:50

问题


For some reason my @ViewChild in my Angular 5 App does not work. I have defined it like this in my component:

case-detail.component.html:

<div class="inner-tab-content" #innerTabContent>
    <!-- // more content here -->
</div>

I have implemented @ViewChild in my controller (above the constructor) like this:

case-detail.component.ts

@ViewChild('innerTabContent') tabContentElement: ElementRef;

And I want to access it here in the component: case-detail.component.ts

ngAfterViewInit() {
    console.log("scroll top: " + this.tabContentElement.nativeElement);
}

I've implemented the AfterViewInit interface. ngAfterViewInit() is called correctly. However, this.tabContentElement is always undefined.

Any help is greatly appreciated :)


回答1:


ViewChild() works fine on latest plunker Angular version with the scenario you describe.

Demonstration in this plunker : https://plnkr.co/edit/KzWnkE5Hvp7NUow6YAxy

component :

ngAfterViewInit() {
    console.log(this.testView); // correctly outputs the element in console, not undefined
}
  • Check that ElementRef and ViewChild are correctly imported from '@angular/core'

  • Your element might simply not be there at the time of AfterViewInit (in case there is a *ngIf, for instance. (seems the case as per your comments)

In the latter case, you can use a wrapper element and ViewChildren , that emits some event when a new child element is added - more info on documentation here : https://angular.io/api/core/ViewChildren

note that there might be some issue with native div as per this question : @ViewChildren does not get updated with dynamically added DOM elements , but this can be worked around by using a new component that wraps your div, for instance.

EDIT

Or you can also use a timeout to wait for the component to be rendered. I must say that I find this solution 'dirty', but glad it works for you :)




回答2:


However, even if you access to the child component in the AfterViewInit, sometimes the @ViewChild was still returning null. The problem can be caused by the *ngIf or other directive.

The solution is to use the @ViewChildren instead of @ViewChild and subscribe the changes subscription that is executed when the component is ready.

For example, if in the parent component ParentComponent you want to access the child component MyComponent.

import { Component, ViewChildren, AfterViewInit, QueryList } from '@angular/core';
import { MyComponent } from './mycomponent.component';

export class ParentComponent implements AfterViewInit
{
  //other code emitted for clarity

  @ViewChildren(MyComponent) childrenComponent: QueryList<MyComponent>;

  public ngAfterViewInit(): void
  {
    this.childrenComponent.changes.subscribe((comps: QueryList<MyComponent>) =>
    {
      // Now you can access to the child component
    });
  }
}



回答3:


A different answer to this question would be sometimes, The child component is still not rendered, when you access it. For me it was due to an *ngIf so that child component is still not there. For an example,

<div *ngIf="check">
   <app-child-item></app-child-item>
</div>

And in your parent .ts file you try to access childItem while check is set to false.




回答4:


To get this to work consistently in my case, I replaced all occurrences of

*ngIf="check"

with

[style.display]="check ? 'block' : 'none'"

Otherwise the ViewChild components that didn't exist when my view first loaded would potentially remain undefined.



来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/48321568/viewchild-returns-undefined

易学教程内所有资源均来自网络或用户发布的内容,如有违反法律规定的内容欢迎反馈
该文章没有解决你所遇到的问题?点击提问,说说你的问题,让更多的人一起探讨吧!