How to add/remove class from directive
If you don't want to use the ngClass
directive (Hint: you can pass a function to [ngClass]="myClasses()"
if it would be to messy inline in your template) you can just utilize the Renderer2
for it to add one or more classes:
export class CustomDirective {
constructor(private renderer: Renderer2,
private elementRef: ElementRef,
service: SomService) {
}
addClass(className: string, element: any) {
this.renderer.addClass(element, className);
// or use the host element directly
// this.renderer.addClass(this.elementRef.nativeElement, className);
}
removeClass(className: string, element: any) {
this.renderer.removeClass(element, className);
}
}
Directive example for opening and closing toggle on dropdown
import { Directive, ElementRef, Renderer2, HostListener, HostBinding } from '@angular/core';
@Directive({
selector: '[appDropDown]',
})
export class DropsownDirective{
@HostBinding('class.open') isopen = false;
@HostListener('mouseenter') onMouseEnter(){
this.isopen = !this.isopen;
}
@HostListener('mouseleave') onMouseLeave(){
this.isopen = !this.isopen;
}
}
Component add directive appDropDown
<div class="col-xs-12">
<div class="btn-group" appDropDown>
<button class="btn btn-primary dropdown-toggle">
Manage Movie <span class="caret"></span>
</button>
<ul class="dropdown-menu">
<li><a href="#">To watching List</a></li>
<li><a href="#">Edit Movie</a></li>
<li><a href="#">Delete Movie</a></li>
</ul>
</div>
Make sure to Include new directive in the @NgModule declarations
When you are using directives in Angular you would want to use @HostBinding
, and bind to class.your-class
in order to be able to add/remove your class based on a predicate. You don't need to DI in the Renderer2
to effectively add/remove classes.
For example, when using Bootstrap and Reactive Forms and you want to indicate a valid or invalid form field you can do something like:
import { Directive, Self, HostBinding, Input } from '@angular/core';
import { NgControl } from '@angular/forms';
@Directive({
selector: '[appCheckFormFieldValidity]'
})
export class CheckFormFieldValidity{
@Input() public class: string;
constructor(
@Self() private ngControl: NgControl
) { }
@HostBinding('class.is-valid')
public get isValid(): boolean {
return this.valid;
}
@HostBinding('class.is-invalid')
public get isInvalid(): boolean {
return this.invalid;
}
public get valid(): boolean {
return this.ngControl.valid &&
(this.ngControl.dirty || this.ngControl.touched);
}
public get invalid(): boolean {
return !this.ngControl.pending &&
!this.ngControl.valid &&
(this.ngControl.touched || this.ngControl.dirty);
}
}
This is not a rigorous example, but it illustrates the use of @HostBinding
, and I created the example in a StackBlitz