/** * Template provides directions an how to bind to a given element. * It contains a list of init functions which need to be called to * bind to a new instance of elements. It also provides a list * of child paths which contain child templates */ function Template(priority) { this.paths = []; this.children = []; this.inits = []; this.priority = priority; this.newScope = false; } Template.prototype = { attach: function(element, scope) { var inits = {}; this.collectInits(element, inits, scope); forEachSorted(inits, function(queue){ forEach(queue, function(fn) {fn();}); }); }, collectInits: function(element, inits, scope) { var queue = inits[this.priority], childScope = scope; if (!queue) { inits[this.priority] = queue = []; } if (this.newScope) { childScope = createScope(scope); scope.$onEval(childScope.$eval); element.data($$scope, childScope); } forEach(this.inits, function(fn) { queue.push(function() { childScope.$tryEval(function(){ return childScope.$service(fn, childScope, element); }, element); }); }); var i, childNodes = element[0].childNodes, children = this.children, paths = this.paths, length = paths.length; for (i = 0; i < length; i++) { children[i].collectInits(jqLite(childNodes[paths[i]]), inits, childScope); } }, addInit:function(init) { if (init) { this.inits.push(init); } }, addChild: function(index, template) { if (template) { this.paths.push(index); this.children.push(template); } }, empty: function() { return this.inits.length === 0 && this.paths.length === 0; } }; /////////////////////////////////// //Compiler ////////////////////////////////// /** * @workInProgress * @ngdoc function * @name angular.compile * @function * * @description * Compiles a piece of HTML string or DOM into a template and produces a template function, which * can then be used to link {@link angular.scope scope} and the template together. * * The compilation is a process of walking the DOM tree and trying to match DOM elements to * {@link angular.markup markup}, {@link angular.attrMarkup attrMarkup}, * {@link angular.widget widgets}, and {@link angular.directive directives}. For each match it * executes coresponding markup, attrMarkup, widget or directive template function and collects the * instance functions into a single template function which is then returned. * * The template function can then be used once to produce the view or as it is the case with * {@link angular.widget.@ng:repeat repeater} many-times, in which case each call results in a view * that is a DOM clone of the original template. *
//copile the entire window.document and give me the scope bound to this template.
var rootSscope = angular.compile(window.document)();
//compile a piece of html
var rootScope2 = angular.compile(''click me')();
//compile a piece of html and retain reference to both the dom and scope
var template = angular.element('click me'),
scoope = angular.compile(view)();
//at this point template was transformed into a view
*
*
* @param {string|DOMElement} element Element or HTML to compile into a template function.
* @returns {function([scope][, cloneAttachFn])} a template function which is used to bind template
* (a DOM element/tree) to a scope. Where:
*
* * `scope` - A {@link angular.scope scope} to bind to. If none specified, then a new
* root scope is created.
* * `cloneAttachFn` - If `cloneAttachFn` is provided, then the link function will clone the
* `template` and call the `cloneAttachFn` function allowing the caller to attach the
* cloned elements to the DOM document at the approriate place. The `cloneAttachFn` is
* called as:
* var view = angular.element('{{total}}
'),
* scope = angular.compile(view)();
*
*
* - if on the other hand, you need the element to be cloned, the view reference from the original
* example would not point to the clone, but rather to the original template that was cloned. In
* this case, you can access the clone via the cloneAttachFn:
*
* var original = angular.element('{{total}}
'),
* scope = someParentScope.$new(),
* clone;
*
* angular.compile(original)(scope, function(clonedElement, scope) {
* clone = clonedElement;
* //attach the clone to DOM document at the right place
* });
*
* //now we have reference to the cloned DOM via `clone`
*
*/
function Compiler(markup, attrMarkup, directives, widgets){
this.markup = markup;
this.attrMarkup = attrMarkup;
this.directives = directives;
this.widgets = widgets;
}
Compiler.prototype = {
compile: function(templateElement) {
templateElement = jqLite(templateElement);
var index = 0,
template,
parent = templateElement.parent();
if (parent && parent[0]) {
parent = parent[0];
for(var i = 0; i < parent.childNodes.length; i++) {
if (parent.childNodes[i] == templateElement[0]) {
index = i;
}
}
}
template = this.templatize(templateElement, index, 0) || new Template();
return function(scope, cloneConnectFn){
// important!!: we must call our jqLite.clone() since the jQuery one is trying to be smart
// and sometimes changes the structure of the DOM.
var element = cloneConnectFn
? JQLitePrototype.clone.call(templateElement) // IMPORTANT!!!
: templateElement;
scope = scope || createScope();
element.data($$scope, scope);
scope.$element = element;
(cloneConnectFn||noop)(element, scope);
template.attach(element, scope);
scope.$eval();
return scope;
};
},
/**
* @workInProgress
* @ngdoc directive
* @name angular.directive.ng:eval-order
*
* @description
* Normally the view is updated from top to bottom. This usually is
* not a problem, but under some circumstances the values for data
* is not available until after the full view is computed. If such
* values are needed before they are computed the order of
* evaluation can be change using ng:eval-order
*
* @element ANY
* @param {integer|string=} [priority=0] priority integer, or FIRST, LAST constant
*
* @example
* try changing the invoice and see that the Total will lag in evaluation
* @example
| QTY | Description | Cost | Total | |
| {{item.total = item.qty * item.cost | currency}} | X | |||
| add | {{ items.$sum('total') | currency }} | |||