AngularJS
for Interactive Application Behavior
Brent Goldstein
Practical Directives
Back Story
● Building an app and want rich behavior○ Don’t limit goals because “it’s a web app”
● Need an interactive Spreadsheet-like Grid○ Hierarchical data, specialized data entry needs○ Similarities to Google Sheets, some differences
● Yikes, this seemed daunting at first○ Hierarchical Data Binding○ Navigation○ Complex element/range selection
Requirements - (be a product mgr)
● Hierarchical Data Seto 3 Row Levels - Person, Projects, Taskso Columns are calendar weeks
● Navigate and Select like a Spreadsheeto Move w/ arrows, tab, shift-tab; mouse-clicko Select single cell or range of cells
● Specialized Editingo Business logic applied to keystrokes before display
How to Render Complex Data?
● Resist thinking like an ‘engineer’
● Visual representation must be intuitive
● Even more important that ‘being’ intuitive→ will someone actually use it?
● Really must pass the dog food test
Digression - Dogfooding?
● OK, this is one of many overused tech industry terms
● Seems to put a rather unappetizing spin on one of the MOST IMPORTANT practices in application design
● It does not matter what you think or say, or what others think or say about using your app
● The application must draw you in (yes, YOU)
● Otherwise, it’s just neat tech, and neat is not a product
Grid Hierarchy Rendering
● Go “Flat” -- flat visual data modeling that is
● Basically, de-normalize where it makes sense→ use grouping to organize
● Greatly simplifies UI construction and interpretation
● Still possible to “drill down”, but using filters and selection to show more/fewer rows
● Avoid “nested grids”; hard to render, hard to read
So how to build it?
- Custom Directive “grid-editor” provides special behaviors- Grid-Editor looks for child DOM elements with special classes
div div div div div div…..
div
…..
…..
<div grid-editor>
<div>
…..
<div class=’grid-person’>
<div class=’grid-person’>
<div>
<div>
Note, grid constructed from divs, not tables, to support custom layout
DOM Location and NavigationLet’s consider one use case, Find the Next cell to the RIGHT
<div grid-editor>
<div>
<div class=’grid-person’>
<div>
...
<div class=’grid-project’>
<div>
<div class=’grid-project’>
<div>
1) At last cell, but not last in row
2) At last cell in row
3) At last cell/row in grid-project
Actually requires handling several sub-cases...
Getting down to Business -- jqLite
<div grid-editor>
<div class=’grid-person’>
col=’1’ col=’2’ col=’3’ col=’5’ ...
<div class=’grid-project’>
col=’4’
1) At last cell, but not last in row
2) At last cell in row
Assuming we know the selected cell, we can find the next like this:
Case 1) Look for next sibling element, use attribute to be selectivevar newElement = currEle.next(‘[col]’);
Case 2) Look for the FIRST element in the NEXT row (requires some maneuvering)var newElement = currEle.closest(‘grid-project’).next(‘grid-project’).find(‘.first’)
Similar ‘traverse up, look for next’ can be applied to higher levels in hierarchy
col=’6’
applied to every cell div: class=’cell’applied to first cell div: class=’first’
What about other cases, like the down arrow key?
Need the next row, but column needs to remain the same. Now that’s why the “col=n” attribute is useful….
Look for next sibling row, use attribute to find the correct columnvar newElement = currEle.closest(‘grid-project’).next(‘grid-project’).find(‘.cell[col=’ + currEle.attr(‘col’) + ‘]’);
Going down, same column, new row
<div grid-editor>
<div class=’grid-person’>
col=’1’ col=’2’ col=’3’ col=’5’ col=’6’
<div class=’grid-project’>
col=’4’
col=’4’
How to capture the arrow keys?
element.bind('keydown keypress', function (e){ if(!scope.editActive) return; // track the editing state
var navArrow = function(e){var arrowKeys = { 37:'left', 38:'up', 39:'right', 40:'down' }; return arrowKeys[e.which]; }; var navTab = function(e){ // tab keyreturn (e.which === 9) ? (e.shiftKey?"left":"right") : null;};
var doNav = navFromArrow(e) || navFromTab(e);if(doNav){
e.preventDefault(); // prevent the browser default actiontheFunctionThatNavigatesToNextCell(doNav)
}};
Can be useful to step outside of Angular for event handling
The ‘element’ above could be the $document root, or a sub-document, depending on the desired behavior. If a sub-doc, the keys will only be captured when that element or children have focus
Rendering the Selection Band
To indicate selected cell, a “rectangle select band” is typically used to surround the cells
How to accomplish this in DOM?
A couple of options:1) Identify and alter the display the underlying DIVs2) Add new elements that Overlay the native grid
Draw band using actual grid cells?
Altering the display of underlying cells can be tricky.
How to actually make the highlight band?- Alter the div/span border(s)
Not ideal. Positioning is limited to element border
Also harder to make a multi-cell rectangle
Overlay Rendering
What about creating a new element/set of elements that display ON TOP of the grid?
Let’s timewarp back to 1998 when graphics were rendered into framebuffers.
Remember the Overlay Framebuffer?
Let’s apply the same logical concept
The Magic Select Rectangle Band
How to render the select rectangle in DOM?
We’ll construct with separate banding elements for max control
It will simplify hover/select options since we can know exactly which side of the band is under the mouse
With this approach we can also add other visual elements, like a cursor select target for dragging, etc.
Top DIV
Bottom DIV
Left
Div
Rig
ht D
iv
Dynamic Element CreationThe select band is managed by the GridEditor Directive:- Create: When the directive is instantiated- Move: When the arrow/tab keys are captured- Grow/Shrink: Based on shift-click
This function is called inside the directive link() function to instantiate the band elements:
var _installBand = function(){ var html = "<div id='magic-square'>"+ "<div class='band-horiz top'></div>" + "<div class='band-horiz bottom'></div>"+ "<div class='band-vert left'></div>"+ "<div class='band-vert right'></div>" + "<div class='band-grabbox'></div>" + "</div>"; _band = angular.element(html); // this creates the dom element _gridEditorElement.prepend(_band); // attach to directive element return _band; // to adjust properties and location later };
Dynamically alter DOM propertiesProperties are updated to adjust the rectangle band size when needed
Note, _unitWidth is already set with the pixel width of a single cell
var _setBandWidth = function(){var rangeWidth = _range(); // gets the desired #cells to cover
// update the top/bottom horizontal div widths_band.children(".band-horiz").width((_unitWidth-1) * rangeWidth);
// update the right vertical div positionvar rightVert = _magicSquare.children(".band-vert.right"); var posLeft = (_unitWidth-1) * rangeWidth -1; rightVert.css({left: posLeft});};
Let’s take a look - Initial View
Top-level view, summary dataUser sees this view when page is loaded
● Threshold coloring (red means too much)● Click on row to expand● Expand All/Collapse All buttons
Let’s take a look - Expanded View
Details for each person visible when expanded
● Project-task rows at same indent level● Grouping by project● Optional project sub-total rows
Let’s take a look - Editing
Behaviors to streamline complex editing needs
● Single Select and Range select● Smart Navigation across projects/people● Shortcut keys for pre-defined operations
Coding tidbit - $emit for messaging
What’s the difference? Well, direction:$emit goes UP, $broadcast goes DOWN
As a result, $emit is more efficient bubbling only to parents$broadcast fans out to all child scopes
Maybe you really need $broadcast... but often not
$emit can be applied in a message-bus pattern to achieve efficient dedicated communication across an app
Both $scope.$broadcast() and $scope.$emit() can be used to communicate between directives and controllers
$emit for messaging
Originating Controller or Directive
Higher level controller or directive
$scope.$emit(‘hello.world’);
$scope.$on(‘hello.world’,function(event){//dosomething));
1) Bubble Up 2) Message Bus
Originating Controller or Directive
RootScope actiing as message Bus
$rootScope.$emit(‘hello.world’);
Listening Directive or Controller
$rootScope.$on(‘hello.world’,function(event){//dosomething));
Message bus approach can often replace $broadcast
contact: [email protected]
thanks!