I like this approach!
But the question is, at what point in my code should i emit the event
scope.$emit('widgetsAreShuffled') ?
If i do this in controller just after I modified my widgets list, can I be
sure that my widget directive recieves it AFTER the actual DOM
modifications by ng-repeat and not immediately?
Will scope.$emit() wait till the end of current digest cycle?
$scope.shuffleWidgets = function() {
// Change the order of widgets to [widget2, widget1]
$scope.widgets[0] = [widget2];
$scope.widgets[1] = [widget1];
scope.$emit('widgetsAreShuffled'); // <---- Can i be sure that
directive recieves this event AFTER the DOM is modified by ng-repeat ?
}
On Thursday, February 20, 2014 12:04:51 PM UTC+4, Sander Elias wrote:
>
> Ivan,
>
> So the ‘reshuffeling’ is under control of your code. Then it’s easy
> enough. In your code, do a $scope.$emit('widgetsAreShuffled')
> In your directive link function something like:
>
> scope.$on('widgetsAreShuffled', function () {
> // re-init your tiny-MCE
> });
>
> if you need a start and stop event, that’s a bit more work, and you need
> to make sure that there is a digest cycle after your start event, but
> before you actually do anything.
>
> Hope this helps a bit?
> Regards
> Sander
>
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