Here's an example. Let's say I want to have an image overlay like a lot of sites. So when you click a thumbnail, a black overlay appears over your whole window, and a larger version of the image is centered in it. Clicking the black overlay dismisses it; clicking the image will call a function that shows the next image.
The html:
<div ng-controller="OverlayCtrl" class="overlay" ng-click="hideOverlay()">
<img src="http://some_src" ng-click="nextImage()"/>
</div>
The javascript:
function OverlayCtrl($scope) {
$scope.hideOverlay = function() {
// Some code to hdie the overlay
}
$scope.nextImage = function() {
// Some code to find and display the next image
}
}
The problem is that with this setup, if you click the image, both nextImage()
and hideOverlay()
are called. But what I want is for only nextImage()
to be called.
I know you can capture and cancel the event in the nextImage()
function like this:
if (window.event) {
window.event.stopPropagation();
}
...But I want to know if there's a better AngularJS way of doing it that won't require me to prefix all of the functions on elements inside the overlay with this snippet.
See Question&Answers more detail:
os 与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…