@ngdoc overview @name Tutorial: 8 - More Templating @description In this step, you will implement the phone details view, which is displayed when a user clicks on a phone in the phone list. Now when you click on a phone on the list, the phone details page with phone-specific information is displayed. To implement the phone details view we will use {@link api/angular.service.$xhr $xhr} to fetch our data, and we'll flesh out the `phone-details.html` view template. The most important changes are listed below. You can see the full diff on {@link https://github.com/angular/angular-phonecat/compare/step-7...step-8 GitHub}: ## Data In addition to `phones.json`, the `app/phones/` directory also contains one json file for each phone: __`app/phones/nexus-s.json`:__ (sample snippet)
{
  "additionalFeatures": "Contour Display, Near Field Communications (NFC),...",
  "android": {
      "os": "Android 2.3",
      "ui": "Android"
  },
  ...
  "images": [
      "img/phones/nexus-s.0.jpg",
      "img/phones/nexus-s.1.jpg",
      "img/phones/nexus-s.2.jpg",
      "img/phones/nexus-s.3.jpg"
  ],
  "storage": {
      "flash": "16384MB",
      "ram": "512MB"
  }
}
Each of these files describes various properties of the phone using the same data structure. We'll show this data in the phone detail view. ## Controller We'll expand the `PhoneDetailCtrl` by using the `$xhr` service to fetch the json files. This works the same way as the phone list controller. __`app/js/controller.js`:__
function PhoneDetailCtrl($xhr) {
  var self = this;

  $xhr('GET', 'phones/' + self.params.phoneId + '.json', function(code, response) {
    self.phone = response;
  });
}

//PhoneDetailCtrl.$inject = ['$xhr'];
To construct the URL for the HTTP request, we use `params.phoneId` extracted from the current route in the `PhoneCatCtrl` controller. ## Template The TBD placeholder line has been replaced with lists and bindings that comprise the phone details. Note where we use the angular `{{expression}}` markup and `ng:repeater`s to project phone data from our model into the view. __`app/partials/phone-details.html`:__


{{phone.name}}

{{phone.description}}

## Test We wrote a new unit test that is similar to the one we wrote for the `PhoneListCtrl` controller in step 5. __`test/unit/controllerSpec.js`:__
...
    it('should fetch phone detail', function() {
      scope.params = {phoneId:'xyz'};
      $browser.xhr.expectGET('phones/xyz.json').respond({name:'phone xyz'});
      ctrl = scope.$new(PhoneDetailCtrl);

      expect(ctrl.phone).toBeUndefined();
      $browser.xhr.flush();

      expect(ctrl.phone).toEqual({name:'phone xyz'});
    });
...
To run the unit tests, execute the `./scripts/test.sh` script and you should see the following output. Chrome: Runner reset. ... Total 3 tests (Passed: 3; Fails: 0; Errors: 0) (5.00 ms) Chrome 11.0.696.57 Mac OS: Run 3 tests (Passed: 3; Fails: 0; Errors 0) (5.00 ms) We also added a new end-to-end test that navigates to the Nexus S detail page and verifies that the heading on the page is "Nexus S". __`test/e2e/scenarios.js`:__
...
  describe('Phone detail view', function() {

    beforeEach(function() {
      browser().navigateTo('../../app/index.html#/phones/nexus-s');
    });


    it('should display nexus-s page', function() {
      expect(binding('phone.name')).toBe('Nexus S');
    });
  });
...
You can now refresh the browser tab with the end-to-end test runner to see the tests run, or you can see them running on {@link http://angular.github.com/angular-phonecat/step-8/test/e2e/runner.html angular's server}. # Experiments * Using the {@link https://docs.google.com/document/d/11L8htLKrh6c92foV71ytYpiKkeKpM4_a5-9c3HywfIc/edit?hl=en&pli=1# end-to-end test runner API}, write a test that verifies that we display 4 thumbnail images on the Nexus S details page. # Summary Now that the phone details view is in place, proceed to step 9 to learn how to write your own custom display filter.