How to send and retrieve parameters using $state.go toParams and $stateParams?
The Nathan Matthews's solution did not work for me but it is totally correct but there is little point to reaching a workaround:
The key point is: Type of defined parameters and toParamas of $state.go should be same array or object on both sides of state transition.
For example when you define a params in a state as follows you means params is array because of using "[]":
$stateProvider
.state('home', {
templateUrl: 'home',
controller: 'homeController'
})
.state('view', {
templateUrl: 'overview',
params: ['index', 'anotherKey'],
controller: 'overviewController'
})
So also you should pass toParams as array like this:
params = { 'index': 123, 'anotherKey': 'This is a test' }
paramsArr = (val for key, val of params)
$state.go('view', paramsArr)
And you can access them via $stateParams as array like this:
app.controller('overviewController', function($scope, $stateParams) {
var index = $stateParams[0];
var anotherKey = $stateParams[1];
});
Better solution is using object instead of array in both sides:
$stateProvider
.state('home', {
templateUrl: 'home',
controller: 'homeController'
})
.state('view', {
templateUrl: 'overview',
params: {'index': null, 'anotherKey': null},
controller: 'overviewController'
})
I replaced [] with {} in params definition. For passing toParams to $state.go also you should using object instead of array:
$state.go('view', { 'index': 123, 'anotherKey': 'This is a test' })
then you can access them via $stateParams easily:
app.controller('overviewController', function($scope, $stateParams) {
var index = $stateParams.index;
var anotherKey = $stateParams.anotherKey;
});
If you want to pass non-URL state, then you must not use url
when setting up your state
. I found the answer on a PR and did some monkeying around to better understand.
$stateProvider.state('toState', {
templateUrl:'wokka.html',
controller:'stateController',
params: {
'referer': 'some default',
'param2': 'some default',
'etc': 'some default'
}
});
Then you can navigate to it like so:
$state.go('toState', { 'referer':'jimbob', 'param2':37, 'etc':'bluebell' });
Or:
var result = { referer:'jimbob', param2:37, etc:'bluebell' };
$state.go('toState', result);
And in HTML thusly:
<a ui-sref="toState(thingy)" class="list-group-item" ng-repeat="thingy in thingies">{{ thingy.referer }}</a>
This use case is completely uncovered in the documentation, but I think it's a powerful means on transitioning state without using URLs.