fiddle
I have a list, and I’d like to be notified whenever it changes. A simple $watch expression isn’t working, which I’m guessing is because angular is checking for referential equality, not structural equality.
<html ng-app>
<head>
</head>
<body ng-controller="Root">
<h1>Base Angular Fiddle</h1>
Times changed: {{timesChanged}}
<ul>
<li ng-repeat="name in names">{{name}}</li>
<li><button ng-click="names.push('another name')">Add</button></li>
</ul>
</body>
</html>
function Root($scope) {
$scope.timesChanged = 0;
$scope.names = ['foo', 'bar', 'baz'];
$scope.$watch('names', function() {
$scope.timesChanged++;
});
}
What I’m hoping will happen is that the callback for 'names' is called each time that I call names.push(). Is there a workaround that’s recommended for this? Or am I just not using $watch correctly?
You are right, angular checks for reference by default, for perfomance reasons. The usage of reference vs equality depends on the value of the $watch function’s third argument, as you can see in the docs. Just set it to true (it is false by default) and your fiddle will work – here it is, working.
the change:
EDIT – Performance implications:
Comparing two arrays/objects can obviously be very inefficient (hence the check by reference angular makes by default), depending on the size and complexity of your variables. There is an alternate method – watching the length of the array. This has obvious limitations – changing one element no longer triggers the $watch function – but can be immensely faster. Here is an updated fiddle!