ngIf
ng
The ngIf
directive removes and recreates a portion of the DOM tree (HTML)
conditionally based on "falsy" and "truthy" values, respectively, evaluated within
an {expression}. In other words, if the expression assigned to ngIf evaluates to a false
value then the element is removed from the DOM and if true then a clone of the
element is reinserted into the DOM.
ngIf
differs from ngShow
and ngHide
in that ngIf
completely removes and recreates the
element in the DOM rather than changing its visibility via the display
css property. A common
case when this difference is significant is when using css selectors that rely on an element's
position within the DOM (HTML), such as the :first-child
or :last-child
pseudo-classes.
Note that when an element is removed using ngIf its scope is destroyed and a new scope
is created when the element is restored. The scope created within ngIf
inherits from
its parent scope using
prototypal inheritance.
An important implication of this is if ngModel
is used within ngIf
to bind to
a javascript primitive defined in the parent scope. In this case any modifications made to the
variable within the child scope will override (hide) the value in the parent scope.
Also, ngIf
recreates elements using their compiled state. An example scenario of this behavior
is if an element's class attribute is directly modified after it's compiled, using something like
jQuery's .addClass()
method, and the element is later removed. When ngIf
recreates the element
the added class will be lost because the original compiled state is used to regenerate the element.
Additionally, you can provide animations via the ngAnimate module to animate the enter and leave effects.
<ANY ng-if="{expression}"> ... </ANY>
Param | Type | Details |
---|---|---|
ngIf | expression | If the expression is falsy then the element is removed from the DOM tree (HTML). |