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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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Toc

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

Adding contacts to the Address Book

Now that we have our Address Book displaying our contacts nicely, let's now create a form to add contacts.

Let us add the markup for the Add a Contact form in the index.html file within the body tag as follows:

<div class="wrapper">
   <h2>Add a Contact</h2>
   Name: <input type="text" ng-model="newPerson.name"></input> 
   Phone: <input type="text" ng-model="newPerson.phone"></input>
   City: <input type="text" ng-model="newPerson.city"></input>
         <button ng-click="Save()">Save</button>
   </div>	

The preceding code is rather straightforward. We create a new div and reuse the wrapper class to style it.

We are adding the three textboxes for the name, phone, and city attributes. We bind these three textboxes to a model object called newPerson as follows:

  • ng-model='newPerson.name'
  • ng-model='newPerson.phone'
  • ng-model='newPerson.city'

We are also adding a button called Save and using the ng-click directive that will call the Save() function when the button is clicked.

Now, let us look at the JavaScript code that we will be writing in our scripts.js file:

$scope.Save=function(){
$scope.people.push({name:$scope.newPerson.name, phone:$scope.newPerson.phone, city:$scope.newPerson.city});
}

Tip

Since the Save() function is accessing the scope within the PeopleController function, it is imperative that the Save() function is written within the PeopleController function in the scripts.js file.

In the $scope.Save function, we simply capture the values from the input boxes and push this into our main people model.

Let us now refresh our index.html and try it out. Fill up the form and save it and you will immediately see it get added to the Address Book. This happens thanks to one of the many cool features of AngularJS called two-way data binding.

The ng-show and ng-hide directives

While the app is good as it is, maybe it's a good idea to have a button called Add Contact and display the Add Contact form only when that button is clicked.

Let us make use of AngularJS's ng-show and ng-hide directives to control the visibility of our Add Contact form.

The way they work is very straightforward. If the attribute ng-show='true', then the div is visible and vice versa. A point to note is that ng-show and ng-hide merely control the visibility of the DOM element.

Let's add our button called Add Contact and set up the ng-show and ng-hide directives such that when you click on Add Contact, the form shows up and at the same time this button disappears. And when the Save button is clicked, the form is hidden and the Add Contact button shows up again.

Let's modify our index.html as follows:

<center><button ng-click="ShowForm()" ng-hide="formVisibility "> Add Contact</button></center>
   <div ng-show="formVisibility " class="wrapper">
          <h2>Add a Contact</h2>
   Name: <input type="text" ng-model="newPerson.name"></input>
   Phone: <input type="text" ng-model="newPerson.phone"></input>
   City: <input type="text" ng-model="newPerson.city"></input>
         <button ng-click="Save()">Save</button>
   </div>	

We set the button to ng-hide='formVisibility' because when the value of formVisibility becomes true, it will hide the button. Similarly, ng-show= formVisibility will make the Add Contact form display when the value of formVisibility is true.

Now, let's add the piece of JavaScript to set the formVisibility values. Add the following code to your scripts.js file as follows:

$scope.ShowForm=function(){
$scope.formVisibility=true;
}

Tip

Make sure this new function is written within the main PeopleController function.

We will also add one line in our existing $scope.Save function to set the value of formVisibility to false.

Please update the $scope.Save() function as highlighted in the following code:

$scope.Save = function() {

    $scope.people.push({
        name: $scope.newPerson.name,
        phone: $scope.newPerson.phone,
        city: $scope.newPerson.city
    });
    $scope.formVisibility = false;

}

Reload your index.html and see the buttons in action.

Oh and just because we don't like the way those default buttons look, lets add a little bit of style to it.

Add the following CSS classes to your styles.css file:

button
{
   background:#080;
   color:#fff;
   padding:5px 15px;
   border-radius: 5px;
   border: thin solid #060;
"margin: 5px auto;"
}
button:hover{
   background: #0A0;
}

What we are simply doing here is setting a dark green color background for the button, giving the text a white color, and giving it some padding five pixels from the top- and bottom-side and 15 pixels from the left-hand side and right-hand side and adding some border radius.

The button:hover is a light green background color just to show the highlight when the user hovers the cursor over the button.

Reload your index.html page and we have our very first working and reasonably good-looking Address Book Application.

You have been reading a chapter from
AngularJS Web Application Development Blueprints
Published in: Aug 2014
Publisher: Packt
ISBN-13: 9781783285617
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