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AngularJS Web Application Development Blueprints

You're reading from   AngularJS Web Application Development Blueprints A practical guide to developing powerful web applications with AngularJS

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Product type Paperback
Published in Aug 2014
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781783285617
Length 300 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Vinci J Rufus Vinci J Rufus
Author Profile Icon Vinci J Rufus
Vinci J Rufus
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Table of Contents (12) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Introduction to AngularJS and the Single Page Application FREE CHAPTER 2. Setting Up Your Rig 3. Rapid Prototyping with AngularJS 4. Using REST Web Services in Your AngularJS App 5. Facebook Friends' Birthday Reminder App 6. Building an Expense Manager Mobile App 7. Building a CMS on the MEAN Stack 8. Scalable Architecture for Deployments on AWS 9. Building an E-Commerce Store A. AngularJS Resources Index

Creating our product details page


Next, we will build our product details page. We'll try this by writing out the factory service that will return the data for the selected product. Within the AWSservice provider, create the following function:

getProductDetails: function(id) {
    var d = $q.defer();

    var params = {
        'Key': {'product_id': {'S': id}
        }
    };
    dynamo.getItem(params, function(err, data) {
        if (err) $log.error('err= ' + err);
        if (data) {
            d.resolve(data);
        }
    });
    return d.promise;
},

The code will look familiar to you by now. We build the params object with the key parameter. Note that the key parameter always needs to be the hash value. In case you defined a RangeKey while creating your table, you will also need to set the RangeKey values while building the params object.

Once the object is ready, we pass it to the getItem method and wait to hear from DynamoDB.

Next, we'll replace the static data with the actual code...

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