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I recently posted a detailed description of the issue I am facing here at SO. As I couldn't send an actual $http
request, I used timeout to simulate asynchronous behavior. Data binding from my model to view is working correct, with the help of @Gloopy
Now, when I use $http
instead of $timeout
(tested locally), I could see the asynchronous request was successful and data
is filled with json response in my service. But, my view is not updating.
updated Plunkr here
I recently posted a detailed description of the issue I am facing here at SO. As I couldn't send an actual $http
request, I used timeout to simulate asynchronous behavior. Data binding from my model to view is working correct, with the help of @Gloopy
Now, when I use $http
instead of $timeout
(tested locally), I could see the asynchronous request was successful and data
is filled with json response in my service. But, my view is not updating.
updated Plunkr here
Share Improve this question edited May 23, 2017 at 12:34 CommunityBot 11 silver badge asked Sep 20, 2012 at 3:36 bsrbsr 58.6k88 gold badges217 silver badges321 bronze badges12 Answers
Reset to default 417Here is a Plunk that does what you want: http://plnkr.co/edit/TTlbSv?p=preview
The idea is that you work with promises directly and their "then" functions to manipulate and access the asynchronously returned responses.
app.factory('myService', function($http) {
var myService = {
async: function() {
// $http returns a promise, which has a then function, which also returns a promise
var promise = $http.get('test.json').then(function (response) {
// The then function here is an opportunity to modify the response
console.log(response);
// The return value gets picked up by the then in the controller.
return response.data;
});
// Return the promise to the controller
return promise;
}
};
return myService;
});
app.controller('MainCtrl', function( myService,$scope) {
// Call the async method and then do stuff with what is returned inside our own then function
myService.async().then(function(d) {
$scope.data = d;
});
});
Here is a slightly more complicated version that caches the request so you only make it first time (http://plnkr.co/edit/2yH1F4IMZlMS8QsV9rHv?p=preview):
app.factory('myService', function($http) {
var promise;
var myService = {
async: function() {
if ( !promise ) {
// $http returns a promise, which has a then function, which also returns a promise
promise = $http.get('test.json').then(function (response) {
// The then function here is an opportunity to modify the response
console.log(response);
// The return value gets picked up by the then in the controller.
return response.data;
});
}
// Return the promise to the controller
return promise;
}
};
return myService;
});
app.controller('MainCtrl', function( myService,$scope) {
$scope.clearData = function() {
$scope.data = {};
};
$scope.getData = function() {
// Call the async method and then do stuff with what is returned inside our own then function
myService.async().then(function(d) {
$scope.data = d;
});
};
});
Let it be simple. It's as simple as
- Return
promise
in your service(no need to usethen
in service) - Use
then
in your controller
Demo. http://plnkr.co/edit/cbdG5p?p=preview
var app = angular.module('plunker', []);
app.factory('myService', function($http) {
return {
async: function() {
return $http.get('test.json'); //1. this returns promise
}
};
});
app.controller('MainCtrl', function( myService,$scope) {
myService.async().then(function(d) { //2. so you can use .then()
$scope.data = d;
});
});
Because it is asynchronous, the $scope
is getting the data before the ajax call is complete.
You could use $q
in your service to create promise
and give it back to
controller, and controller obtain the result within then()
call against promise
.
In your service,
app.factory('myService', function($http, $q) {
var deffered = $q.defer();
var data = [];
var myService = {};
myService.async = function() {
$http.get('test.json')
.success(function (d) {
data = d;
console.log(d);
deffered.resolve();
});
return deffered.promise;
};
myService.data = function() { return data; };
return myService;
});
Then, in your controller:
app.controller('MainCtrl', function( myService,$scope) {
myService.async().then(function() {
$scope.data = myService.data();
});
});
tosh shimayama have a solution but you can simplify a lot if you use the fact that $http returns promises and that promises can return a value:
app.factory('myService', function($http, $q) {
myService.async = function() {
return $http.get('test.json')
.then(function (response) {
var data = reponse.data;
console.log(data);
return data;
});
};
return myService;
});
app.controller('MainCtrl', function( myService,$scope) {
$scope.asyncData = myService.async();
$scope.$watch('asyncData', function(asyncData) {
if(angular.isDefined(asyncData)) {
// Do something with the returned data, angular handle promises fine, you don't have to reassign the value to the scope if you just want to use it with angular directives
}
});
});
A little demonstration in coffeescript: http://plunker.no.de/edit/ksnErx?live=preview
Your plunker updated with my method: http://plnkr.co/edit/mwSZGK?p=preview
A much better way I think would be something like this:
Service:
app.service('FruitsManager',function($q){
function getAllFruits(){
var deferred = $q.defer();
...
// somewhere here use: deferred.resolve(awesomeFruits);
...
return deferred.promise;
}
return{
getAllFruits:getAllFruits
}
});
And in the controller you can simply use:
$scope.fruits = FruitsManager.getAllFruits();
Angular will automatically put the resolved awesomeFruits
into the $scope.fruits
.
I had the same problem, but when I was surfing on the internet I understood that $http return back by default a promise, then I could use it with "then" after return the "data". look at the code:
app.service('myService', function($http) {
this.getData = function(){
var myResponseData = $http.get('test.json').then(function (response) {
console.log(response);.
return response.data;
});
return myResponseData;
}
});
app.controller('MainCtrl', function( myService, $scope) {
// Call the getData and set the response "data" in your scope.
myService.getData.then(function(myReponseData) {
$scope.data = myReponseData;
});
});
When binding the UI to your array you'll want to make sure you update that same array directly by setting the length to 0 and pushing the data into the array.
Instead of this (which set a different array reference to data
which your UI won't know about):
myService.async = function() {
$http.get('test.json')
.success(function (d) {
data = d;
});
};
try this:
myService.async = function() {
$http.get('test.json')
.success(function (d) {
data.length = 0;
for(var i = 0; i < d.length; i++){
data.push(d[i]);
}
});
};
Here is a fiddle that shows the difference between setting a new array vs emptying and adding to an existing one. I couldn't get your plnkr working but hopefully this works for you!
Related to this I went through a similar problem, but not with get or post made by Angular but with an extension made by a 3rd party (in my case Chrome Extension).
The problem that I faced is that the Chrome Extension won't return then()
so I was unable to do it the way in the solution above but the result is still Asynchronous.
So my solution is to create a service and to proceed to a callback
app.service('cookieInfoService', function() {
this.getInfo = function(callback) {
var model = {};
chrome.cookies.get({url:serverUrl, name:'userId'}, function (response) {
model.response= response;
callback(model);
});
};
});
Then in my controller
app.controller("MyCtrl", function ($scope, cookieInfoService) {
cookieInfoService.getInfo(function (info) {
console.log(info);
});
});
Hope this can help others getting the same issue.
I've read http://markdalgleish.com/2013/06/using-promises-in-angularjs-views/ [AngularJS allows us to streamline our controller logic by placing a promise directly on the scope, rather than manually handing the resolved value in a success callback.]
so simply and handy :)
var app = angular.module('myApp', []);
app.factory('Data', function($http,$q) {
return {
getData : function(){
var deferred = $q.defer();
var promise = $http.get('./largeLoad').success(function (response) {
deferred.resolve(response);
});
// Return the promise to the controller
return deferred.promise;
}
}
});
app.controller('FetchCtrl',function($scope,Data){
$scope.items = Data.getData();
});
Hope this help
I really don't like the fact that, because of the "promise" way of doing things, the consumer of the service that uses $http has to "know" about how to unpack the response.
I just want to call something and get the data out, similar to the old $scope.items = Data.getData();
way, which is now deprecated.
I tried for a while and didn't come up with a perfect solution, but here's my best shot (Plunker). It may be useful to someone.
app.factory('myService', function($http) {
var _data; // cache data rather than promise
var myService = {};
myService.getData = function(obj) {
if(!_data) {
$http.get('test.json').then(function(result){
_data = result.data;
console.log(_data); // prove that it executes once
angular.extend(obj, _data);
});
} else {
angular.extend(obj, _data);
}
};
return myService;
});
Then controller:
app.controller('MainCtrl', function( myService,$scope) {
$scope.clearData = function() {
$scope.data = Object.create(null);
};
$scope.getData = function() {
$scope.clearData(); // also important: need to prepare input to getData as an object
myService.getData($scope.data); // **important bit** pass in object you want to augment
};
});
Flaws I can already spot are
- You have to pass in the object which you want the data added to, which isn't an intuitive or common pattern in Angular
getData
can only accept theobj
parameter in the form of an object (although it could also accept an array), which won't be a problem for many applications, but it's a sore limitation- You have to prepare the input object
$scope.data
with= {}
to make it an object (essentially what$scope.clearData()
does above), or= []
for an array, or it won't work (we're already having to assume something about what data is coming). I tried to do this preparation step INgetData
, but no luck.
Nevertheless, it provides a pattern which removes controller "promise unwrap" boilerplate, and might be useful in cases when you want to use certain data obtained from $http in more than one place while keeping it DRY.
As far as caching the response in service is concerned , here's another version that seems more straight forward than what I've seen so far:
App.factory('dataStorage', function($http) {
var dataStorage;//storage for cache
return (function() {
// if dataStorage exists returned cached version
return dataStorage = dataStorage || $http({
url: 'your.json',
method: 'GET',
cache: true
}).then(function (response) {
console.log('if storage don\'t exist : ' + response);
return response;
});
})();
});
this service will return either the cached data or $http.get
;
dataStorage.then(function(data) {
$scope.data = data;
},function(e){
console.log('err: ' + e);
});
Please try the below Code
You can split the controller (PageCtrl) and service (dataService)
'use strict';
(function () {
angular.module('myApp')
.controller('pageContl', ['$scope', 'dataService', PageContl])
.service('dataService', ['$q', '$http', DataService]);
function DataService($q, $http){
this.$q = $q;
this.$http = $http;
//... blob blob
}
DataService.prototype = {
getSearchData: function () {
var deferred = this.$q.defer(); //initiating promise
this.$http({
method: 'POST',//GET
url: 'test.json',
headers: { 'Content-Type': 'application/json' }
}).then(function(result) {
deferred.resolve(result.data);
},function (error) {
deferred.reject(error);
});
return deferred.promise;
},
getABCDATA: function () {
}
};
function PageContl($scope, dataService) {
this.$scope = $scope;
this.dataService = dataService; //injecting service Dependency in ctrl
this.pageData = {}; //or [];
}
PageContl.prototype = {
searchData: function () {
var self = this; //we can't access 'this' of parent fn from callback or inner function, that's why assigning in temp variable
this.dataService.getSearchData().then(function (data) {
self.searchData = data;
});
}
}
}());
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