AngularJS UI Bootstrap Tabs that support routing

不问归期 提交于 2019-11-29 22:10:29

To add routing you typically use an ng-view directive. I'm not sure it's easy enough to modify angular UI to support what you're looking for, but here's a plunker showing roughly what i think you're looking for (it's not necessarily the best way of doing it - hopefully someone can give you a better solution or improve on this)

Use data-target="#tab1". Worked for me

I also have this requirement and I'm doing something similar to the answer provided by Chris, but I'm also using AngularUI router, because ngRouter does not support nested views and it is possible you'll have the tabs content view inside another view (I did) and that won't work with ng-view.

This answer really helped me http://odetocode.com/blogs/scott/archive/2014/04/14/deep-linking-a-tabbed-ui-with-angularjs.aspx (very simple but powerful solution)

you could pass your own custom key value pairs in the route definition and achieve this. here's a good example: http://www.bennadel.com/blog/2420-Mapping-AngularJS-Routes-Onto-URL-Parameters-And-Client-Side-Events.htm

Agree with the use of UI-Router which tracks states and works great with nested views. Speaking particularly of your Bootstrap tabs issue there is a great implementation that leverages UI Router: UI-Router Tabs

If you have a route called settings and you want to have tabs in that settings page something like this works.

<div class="right-side" align="center">
    <div class="settings-body">
        <ul class="nav nav-tabs">
          <li class="active"><a data-toggle="tab" href="#!/settings#private_email">Private email</a></li>
          <li><a data-toggle="tab" href="#!/settings#signature">Signature</a></li>
          <li><a data-toggle="tab" href="#menu2">Menu 2</a></li>
        </ul>

        <div class="tab-content">
          <div id="private_email" class="tab-pane fade in active">
            <div class="row" ng-controller="SettingsController">
                <div>
                   <button class="btn btn-primary" ng-click="activatePrivateEmail()">Activate email</button>
                   <button class="btn btn-danger">Deactivate email</button>
                </div>
            </div>
          </div>
          <div id="signature" class="tab-pane fade">
              <textarea ui-tinymce="tinymceOptions" ng-model="signature"></textarea>
              <div class="send-btn">
                <button name="send" ng-click="" class="btn btn-primary">Save signature</button>
              </div>
          </div>
          <div id="menu2" class="tab-pane fade">
            <h3>Menu 2</h3>
            <p>Some content in menu 2.</p>
          </div>
        </div>
    </div>
</div>

just a small add to accepted answer: i needed to keep the current tab at page refresh so i used a switch like this:

$scope.tabs = [
            { link : '#/furnizori', label : 'Furnizori' },
            { link : '#/total', label : 'Total' },
            { link : '#/clienti', label : 'Clienti' },
            { link : '#/centralizator', label : 'Centralizator' },
            { link : '#/optiuni', label : 'Optiuni' }
        ];

        switch ($location.path()) {
            case '/furnizori':
                $scope.selectedTab = $scope.tabs[0];
                break;

            case '/total':
                $scope.selectedTab = $scope.tabs[1];
                break;

            case '/clienti':
                $scope.selectedTab = $scope.tabs[2];
                break;

            case '/centralizator':
                $scope.selectedTab = $scope.tabs[3];
                break;

            case '/optiuni':
                $scope.selectedTab = $scope.tabs[4];
                break;

            default:
                $scope.selectedTab = $scope.tabs[0];
                break;
        }

I got tabs with routing working the following way.

It's able to do everything you want from dynamic tabs, and it's actually very simple.

  • Tabs with a ui-view, so it can dynamically load templates,
  • Update routing in URL
  • Set history state
  • When directly navigating to a route with a tabbed view, the correct tab is marked as active.

Define the tabs with a parameter in your router

.state('app.tabs', {
    url         : '/tabs',
    template    : template/tabs.html,
})
.state('app.tabs.tab1', {
    url         : '/tab1',
    templateUrl : 'template/tab1.html',
    params      : {
        tab         : 'tab1'
    }
})
.state('app.visitors.browser.analytics', {
    url         : '/tab1',
    templateUrl : 'template/tab2.html',
    params      : {
        tab         : 'tab2'
    }
})

The tabs template (tabs.html) is

<div ng-controller="TabCtrl as $tabs">
    <uib-tabset active="$tabs.activeTab">
        <uib-tab heading="This is tab 1" index="'tab1'" ui-sref="app.tabs.tab1"></uib-tab>
        <uib-tab heading="This is tab 2" index="'tab2'" ui-sref="app.tabs.tab2"></uib-tab>
    </uib-tabset>
    <div ui-view></div>
</div>

Which is paired with a very simple controller for getting the current active tab:

app.controller('TabCtrl', function($stateParams) {
    this.activeTab = $stateParams.tab;
})

This aught to be able to do what you want:

https://github.com/angular-ui/ui-router

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