This is precisely the problem I had to solve for my site 33hotels.com. You can check it and play with the tabs "Filter" and "Filter List" (corresponding to different Routes), and see that the View is updated instantly without any delay!
How did I do it? The idea is surprisingly simple - get rid of the Router!
Why? Because the way the Router works is it re-compiles the View upon every single Route change. Yes, Angular does cache the Template but not the compiled View populated with data. Even if data do not change! As the result, when I used the Router in the past, the switch always felt sluggish and non-reactive. Every time I could notice annoying delay, it was a fraction of second but still noticeable.
Now the solution I used? Don't re-compile your Views! Keep them inside your DOM at all times! Then use ng-hide
/ng-show
to hide/show them depending on the routes:
<div ng-show="routeIs('/dashboard')">
<-- Your template for Dashboard -->
</div>
<div ng-show="routeIs('/book')">
<-- Your template for Book -->
</div>
Then create a function routeIs(string)
inside your Controller
to test if $location.path()
matches string
, or begins with string
as I am using it. That way I still get my View for all pathes like /book/2
. Here is the function I am using:
$scope.routeBegins = function () {
return _.some(arguments, function (string) {
return 0 === $location.path().indexOf(string);
});
};
So no need to be smart with caching - just keep it in the DOM. It will cache your Views for you!
And the best part is - whenever your data is changed, Angular will instantly update all the Views inside your DOM, even the hidden ones!
Why is this awesome? Because, as user, I don't have to wait for all the parsing and compiling at the moment I want to see the result. I want to click the tab and see my results immediately! Why should the site wait for me to click it and then begin all the re-compiling as I am waiting? Especially when this could be easily done before, during the time my computer is idle.
Is there any downside? The only real one I can think of is loading memory with more DOM elements. However, this actual byte size of my views is negligible, comparing e.g. with all JS, CSS and images.
Another possible but avoidable downside is the re-compilation cost of the hidden views. This is where you can get smart and avoid computation-heavy parts depending on the current routes.
Also, you are not re-compiling the whole View, just the parts affected by data changes, which also lowers computational cost.
I find it quite remarkable that everyone is using Routes and seems to be completely unaware (or ignorant) of this problem.