Integration between jquery mobile and angular.js. Needed as jquery mobile
enhances the pages with new elements and styles and so does angular. With this adapter,
all widgets in jquery mobile can be used directly in angular, without further modifications.
Furthermore, this adapter also provides special utilities useful for mobile applications.
If you are interested in how to build mobile web apps with this adapter, have a look at the german book
Mobile Web-Apps mit JavaScript.
This assumes that all libs are in the root folder of your webapp. To put them into a subfolder like lib use the
paths argument in the call to require.config (e.g. paths: {angular: lib/angular}, ...)
The libraries jQuery, jQuery Mobile and the adapter are already AMD modules. Only angular is not, which is why
we need a shim config for it.
We simulate a later load event of the document by using jQuery.holdReady, by which we wait until all modules
have been loaded. This is needed as the normal load event may occur before all modules have been loaded by requirejs.
Note that this functionality was already included in requirejs 1.x, but no more in requirejs 2.x.
Usage of manual bootstrap of angular does not work well with jquery-mobile, as jquery-mobile relies on the
jQuery ready event to be fired at the right time.
Versioning
The adapter always takes the major and minor version of jquery mobile, e.g. if you want to use jquery mobile 1.3.x, use the adapter version 1.3.x.
The patch version is assigend incrementally.
Build
Directory structure
compiled: The created versions of the adapter.
jquery-mobile-angular-adapter.js: The adapter.
jquery-mobile-angular-adapter-standalone.js: Version of the adapter that includes jquery, angular and jquery mobile. If you want to do something during the initialization of jquery- mobile, use the following callback:
window.mobileinit = function() { ... }
src: The main files of uitest.js
test/ui: The ui self tests for uitest.js
test/unit: The unit tests of uitest.js
Install the dependencies: npm install.
Build it: ./node_modules/.bin/grunt
Auto-Run tests when file change: ./node_modules/.bin/grunt dev
##Navigation and routes
The adapter integrates angular routes with jquery mobile:
We set $locationProvider.html5Mode(true), $locationProvider.hashPrefix('!')
and add the tag <base href="{address of your html file}"> to your header.
By this, we are compatible to the default jquery mobile url layout,
e.g. links like <a href="somePage.html"> are possible and do not reload the whole page but use AJAX and result in modern browsers in a url of /somePage.html (via history API).
The <base> tag is created by jquery mobile. For routes, this makes all routes relative
to the current page. E.g. if your page is under /test/index.html, and you want a route to
/test/somePage.html then your route would be $routeProvider.when(/somePage.html`).
Default routing: If no route is defined, the default jquery mobile url handling applies:
Navigation to a hash shows the page whose id is the same as the hash, e.g.
<a href="#somePage">.
Navigation to a normal page loads that page using ajax and
then navigates to that page, e.g. <a href="somePage.html">
You can set the special property jqmOptions on routes, e.g.
Those properties are directly passed to $.mobile.changePage. For a documentation of the available options
have a look at the jquery mobile documentation.
You can set the special property onActivate in routes. If this is set,
it will be evaluated in the scope of the page to which the route navigates to,
before the pagebeforeshow event.
This expression can also use the properties from $routeParams and $route.current.locals, which are calculates by the resolve entry
of the route. E.g.
Page1 is embedded page, and therefore, all links within that page are relative to the initial url of the app. Page2 is an external page and all relative links in that page are relative to the folder /someTemplateFolder.
Please also look at the extensions to the $location service for controlling history and changing route params for just one route call.
Default routing: basePath+$location.url()
E.g. for a page /somePath/somePage.html and location.url()=='/page1' this results in /somePath/page1.
To be compatible to plain jquery mobile the adapter creates a default routing for all urls that are not
mapped by other routes.
If a document contains the link <a href="somePage"> and the user clicks on that link, angular updates $location.url
to /somePage. However, in plain jquery mobile, this should load the page /somePath/somePage. This is why
we append the basePath to the $location.url().
Notes:
Using $.mobile.changePage directly is not recommended. It still works, but it will no more update the browser location.href.
If you don't want $locationProvider.html5Mode you can disable it.
By this, you get hash urls like /index.html#!/somePath... back. E.g.
Internally, we use jquery mobile to load the pages and do the transition between the pages.
By this, we automatically support the prefetching and caching functionality for pages from jquery mobile (see their docs for details).
E.g. use <a href="prefetchThisPage.html" data-prefetch> ... </a> in a parent page to prefetch a child page.
If you want to start an app directly on a subpage, use the following url:
For an external page that should be loaded using ajax: index.html#!/somePage.html
For an internal page that is also contained in the index.html: index.html#/!index.html#someOtherPage (yes, this url contains
2 hashes). If you are sure that all browsers that you use support the new history API, you can also use the url
index.html#someOtherPage to start at an internal page.
Restrictions:
controllers on routes are not supported. Please use ng-controller within the page to be loaded for this
or the onActivate function on routes.
The reasoning behind this is that some pages of jquery mobile are local pages in the same document as the main page
and others are loaded using ajax. However, the pages in the same document are compiled at the same time the main page is compiled.
Furthermore, by supporting the page cache of jquery mobile assigning a controller would also not be possible.
To pass data via routes just let your controllers examine the current route using the $route and $routeParams service.
Routes with a templateUrl must point to a full jquery mobile page. Loading parts of jquery mobile pages is not supported.
The ngView directive cannot be used as jqm pages need to be inserted at a special place in the DOM.
However, the adapter takes care of the normal ngView handling and inserts the pages at the right place.
There needs to be an initial page in the main document of the application. I.e. a <div data-role="page"> within
that html file that also includes angular and jqm. All other pages can then be included using routes with
a templateUrl property.
##Scopes
Every page of jquery mobile gets a separate scope. The $digest of the global scope only evaluates the currently active page,
so there is no performance interaction between pages.
For communicating between the pages use the ngm-shared-controller directive (see below).
Mobile pages are small, so often a usecase is split up into multiple pages.
To share common behaviour and state between those pages, this directive allows shared controllers.
The directive will create an own scope for every given controllers and store it
in the variables as name1, name2, ....
If the controller is used on more than one page, the instance of the controller is shared.
Note that the shared controller have the full scope functionality, e.g. for dependecy injection
or using $watch.
The directive @ngm-if allows to add/remove an element to/from the dom, depending on an expression.
This is especially useful at places where we cannot insert an ng-switch into the dom. E.g. jquery mobile
does not allow elements between an ul and an li element.
Usage: E.g. <div ngm-if="myFlag">asdfasdf</div>
Service $history
Methods and Properties:
$history.go(relativeIndex): This will directly call window.history.go(relativeIndex).
$history.goBack(): Calls $history.go(-1).
$history.urlStack: This contains the list of visited urls
$history.activeIndex: This defines the currently active index in the urlStack
$history.removePastEntries(number): This will remove the given number of history entries
before the current entry. The current entry stays current. Used when leaving dialogs, or for $location.back(). Note: This does not fire any $locationChange* events.
Service $location (extensions)
$location.routeOverride(someOverride): By this, you can override route properties only
for the next routing. This is useful e.g. for passing special parameters to the onActivate expression. The following
properties of routes can be overridden:
jqmOptions: Options to give to $.mobile.changePage of jquery mobile (e.g. transition, ...)
locals: the resolved functions from the resolve hash in a route.
onActivate: the expression to evaluate on the target page with the locals.
$location.backMode(): This will try to go back in history to the url specified by $location. E.g. if the navigation path
to the current page is page1->page2->page3 and we then call $location.path('page1'); $location.backMode() this will
go two steps back in history.
Note that this is in analogy to the already existing angular method $location.replace.
Service $waitDialog
The service $waitDialog allows the access to the jquery mobile wait dialog. It provides the following functions:
show(msg, callback): Opens the wait dialog and shows the given message (if existing).
If the user clicks on the wait dialog the given callback is called.
This can be called even if the dialog is currently showing. It will the change the message
and revert back to the last message when the hide function is called.
hide(): Restores the dialog state before the show function was called.
waitFor(promise, msg): Shows the dialog as long as the given promise runs. Shows the given message if defined.
waitForWithCancel(promise, cancelData, msg): Same as above, but rejects the promise with the given cancelData
when the user clicks on the wait dialog.
Default messages are:
$.mobile.loader.prototype.options.textWithCancel: for waitForWithCancel. This is a new property.
$.mobile.loader.prototype.options.text: for all other cases, see the jquery mobile docs.
Filter paged: Paging for lists
Lists can be paged in the sense that more entries can be additionally loaded. By "loading" we mean the
display of a sublist of a list that is already fully loaded in JavaScript. This is useful, as the main performance
problems result from DOM operations, which can be reduced with this paging mechanism.
To implement this paging mechanism, the angular filter paged was created.
For displaying a page within a list, simply use:
list | paged:'pagerId':12
This returns the subarray of the given array with the currently loaded pages.
Parameters:
The first parameter is required and must be unique for every usage of the paged filter. It is the property name in the scope
which stores the state of pagination for this filter usage, and also contains the function loadMore and hasMore (see below).
If the second parameter is a number, it is interpreted as the pageSize. If this parameter is omitted, the default page size is used.
This is by default 10, and can be configured using
module(["ng"]).value('defaultListPageSize', 123);
For filtering and sorting the paged array, you can use filter chaining with the angular filters filter and orderBy, e.g.
list | filter:{name:'someName'} | orderBy:'name' | paged:'pagerId'
To show a button that loads the next page of the list, use the following syntax:
pagerId.hasMore returns a boolean indicating if all pages of the list have been loaded.
pagerId.loadMore() loads the next page into the list.
The following example shows an example for a paged list for the data in the variable myList:
<ul data-role="listview">
<li ng-repeat="item in list | paged:'pager1'">{{item}}</li>
<li ngm-if="pager1.hasMore">
<a href="#" ngm-vclick="pager1.loadMore()">Load more</a>
</li>
</ul>
Note: pagerId.cache stores the last result that was returns for a list | paged:'pagerId' expression. This can be
used to check whether the paged list is empty, .. without refiltering the list.
Notes on the integration of some jqm widgets
widget collapsible
The attribute data-collapsed has bidirectional data binding, e.g.
using ng-repeat with a checkbox or radio button without a wrapper element can be done like the following:
<label ng-repeat="l in [1,2]">
{{l}}
<input type="checkbox">
</label>
widget popup
the jqm adapter does not change the url when a popup is opened/closed. This is due to the fact that the jqm adatper assumes that urls represent routings for pages, and not parts of pages.
The new attribute data-opened has bidirectional data binding for opening/closing the popup, e.g.
the jqm adapter does not change the url when a panel is opened/closed. This is due to the fact that the jqm adatper assumes that urls represent routings for pages, and not parts of pages.
The new attribute data-opened has bidirectional data binding for opening/closing the panel, e.g.
jQuery Mobile does not yet support refreshing a slider widget when child <option> elements have changed. As a consequence, using <select data-role="slider"> with ng-options only uses
the initial state of the ng-options collection. Chaning the ng-options collection will not
update the widget.
ng-repeat is not supported on a <select data-role="slider"> yet, as jqm
creates a sibling element to the select, instead of a wrapper (like in all other cases).
##Integrating custom jquery mobile plugins with angular
All integration work is done using the jqmNgWidget provider.
This will automatically create angular directives
for all jqm widgets that are contained in $.mobile and use the jqm widget factory (e.g. $.mobile.dialog). If you want to specify a custom handler for a jqm directive,
use the following pattern:
See src/main/webapp/widgetAdapters.js for more examples.
##Integration strategy
Jquery mobile has two kinds of markup:
Stateless markup/widgets: Markup, that does not hold state or event listeners, and just adds css classes to the dom.
E.g. $.fn.buttonMarkup, which is created using <a href="..." data-role="button">
Stateful markup/widgets: Markup that holds state (e.g. event listeners, ...). This markup uses the jquery ui widget factory.
E.g. $.mobile.button, which is created using <button>.
Integration strategy:
We have a precompile phase: This is called before the angular compiles does it's work, i.e. before
$compile is called, and before directive.template and directive.templateUrl is evaluated.
Here, we trigger the jqm create and pagecreate event.
Before this, we instrument all stateful jqm widgets (see above), so they do not
really create the jqm widget, but only add the attribute jqm-create=<widgetName> and jqm-link=<widgetname>
to the corresponding element. By this, all stateless markup can be used by angular for stamping (e.g. in ng-repeat),
without calling a jqm method again, so we are fast.
Furthermore, we have special handlers in the precompile phase for those jqm widgets that wrap themselves into new elements
(checkboxradio, slider, button, selectmenu, search input), as the angular compiler does not like this.
Finally, we also mark all jqm pages with the jqm-page attribute. This is needed as jqm pages are
represented as data-role=page in the dom and angular does not allow to create directives that only match
pages but not other jqm widgets.
We have the directive ngmPage:
This creates an own scope for every page. By this, we are able to disconnect the scope of the pages that
are not visible right now. This is important for optimizing performance.
This creates the jqm pages by calling element.page() in the pre link phase, however without the
pagecreate event. By this, we only create the page instance, but do not modify the dom
(as this is not allowed in the pre link phase). Furthermore, the page jqm widget instance is already
available for the other widgets, which are created in the post link phase.
We have the directive ngmCreate:
This will create the jqm widgets in the post link phase. For widgets that wrap themselves into new elements this
needs to be called for the wrapper, that was already created in the precompile phase. This is important as
the jqm widgets do more DOM transformations during creations that the angular compiler does not like
(e.g. the jqm widget <input type="checkbox>" enhances the sibling <label> element and wraps that element).
By calling the widget during the post link phase of the wrapper element those DOM modifications are ok with angular.
We have the directive ngmLink:
Here we listen for changes in the model and refresh the jqm widgets when needed and vice versa.
For elements that wrap themselves into new elements this will be called on the original element
(e.g. the <input> for <input type="checkbox"> elements), in contrast to the ngmCreate directive.
All together: This minimizes the number DOM traversals and DOM changes
We use angular's stamping for stateless widget markup, i.e. we call the jqm functions only once,
and let angular do the rest.
We do not use the jqm create event for refreshing widgets,
but angular's directives. By this, we prevent unneeded executions of jquery selectors.
We reuse the selectors in jqm for detecting which elements should be enhanced with which jqm widgets.
Ohter possibilities not chosen:
Calling the jqm "create"-Event whenever the DOM changes (see the jqm docs). However,
this is very slow, as this would lead to many DOM traversals by the different jqm listeners
for the "create"-Event.
Integration of jqm routing and angular routing:
We chose to use the angular routing, as it is very flexible and programmable, and it is easier to integrate jqm
routing with angular routing and the other way around.
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