ngShow
takes an Angular expression so you don't want the double curly braces.
This will work for you:
<div ng-show="(doors + windows) < 6">
Shows if you have 0-5 doors and windows combined.
</div>
<div ng-show="(doors + windows) > 5 && (doors + windows) < 11">
Shows if you have 6-10 doors and windows combined.
</div>
<div ng-show="(doors + windows) > 10">
Shows if you have more than 10 doors and windows combined.
</div>
demo fiddle
To understand why let's look at the ngShow
source code:
var ngShowDirective = ['$animate', function($animate) {
return function(scope, element, attr) {
scope.$watch(attr.ngShow, function ngShowWatchAction(value){
$animate[toBoolean(value) ? 'removeClass' : 'addClass'](element, 'ng-hide');
});
};
}];
The key is that it puts a watch on attr.ngShow
. When you set that attribute to {{(doors + windows) < 6}}
the first thing that happens is the expression in the double curly braces is evaluated. In your case, doors and windows start out undefined
so the expression evaluates to false
. Then false
is passed in to the attribute. So a $watch
is placed on false
and every $digest
cycle false
is checked, and false
keeps being false
so the watch function never runs.
The important thing to note is that the attribute itself isn't being watched, but the value that was initially passed in is watched. So even though you later change the attribute to "true", and see that change in the html, that's never noticed by the watch.
When, instead, we pass in (doors + windows) < 6
as attr.ngShow
then on each $digest
the $watch
evaluates that expression. And whenever the result of the expression changes the watch function is called and the appropriate class set.
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