Angular Directive for the famous JS Tree library.
##Dependencies
The ngJsTree depends on the following libraries:
- Angular
- JsTree
##Install
You can install the ngJsTree with bower:
bower install ng-js-tree --save
or with npm:
npm install ng-js-tree --save
or you can add the ngJsTree.min.js file to your HTML page:
<script src="jquery.js"/>
<script src="angular.js"/>
<script src="jstree.min.js"/>
<script src="ngJsTree.min.js"/>
Add the ngJsTree
to your module dependencies
#Documentation
You can find the JSTree documentation at this link
<div js-tree="treeConfig" ng-model="treeData" should-apply="ignoreModelChanges()" tree="treeInstance" tree-events="ready:readyCB;create_node:createNodeCB"></div>
treeConfig
- This is the configuration object of the JsTree, if you will not supply one, an empty one will be created (not mandatory).treeData
- The array with the elements of the tree, will be used for data binding (adding / removing / updating this data will be reflected in the tree).ignoreModelChanges()
- A method that returns true or false. when returning false, model changes will not be reflected in the tree (not mandatory).treeInstance
- The Js Tree instance will be assigned to this variable in your controller scope (not mandatory).ready:readyCB;create_node:createNodeCB
- List of Js Tree events and callbacks in your controller scope that will be called for each event (not mandatory.
You can register a callback for any Js Tree event in one of the following ways:
- add the
tree-events
attribute and specify the name of the events to register for and a callback for each event.
Example:
<div ng-controller='myCtrl'>
<div js-tree="treeConfig" ng-model="treeData" should-apply="ignoreModelChanges()" tree="treeInstance" tree-events="ready:readyCB;create_node:createNodeCB"></div>
</div>
angular.module('myApp').controller('myCtrl', function($scope,$log) {
$scope.readyCB = function() {
$log.info('ready called');
};
$scope.createNodeCB = function(e,item) {
$log.info('create_node called');
};
);
- add the
tree-events-obj
attribute passing an object containing the list of events with the callback objects.
Example:
<div ng-controller='myCtrl'>
<div js-tree="treeConfig" ng-model="treeData" should-apply="ignoreModelChanges()" tree="treeInstance" tree-events-obj="treeEventsObj"></div>
</div>
angular.module('myApp').controller('myCtrl', function($scope,$log) {
$scope.treeEventsObj = {
'ready': readyCB,
'create_node': createNodeCB
}
function readyCB() {
$log.info('ready called');
};
function createNodeCB(e,item) {
$log.info('create_node called');
};
);
NOTE: Only one of the methods can be used to pass event callbacks, tree-events
will take precedence.
Add the tree attribute to the jstree directive and assign it with a name of a variable in your controller that will hold the jstree instance.
<div ng-controller='myCtrl'>
<div js-tree="treeConfig" ng-model="treeData" tree="treeInstance"></div>
</div>
function yourCtrl($scope) {
var selected_nodes = $scope.treeInstance.jstree(true).get_selected();
}
If from some reason you would like to recreate the tree, the right way to do it is update the tree configuration object. Once the directive will detect a change to the tree configuration it will destory the tree and recreate it.
this.treeConfig = {
core : {
multiple : false,
animation: true,
error : function(error) {
$log.error('treeCtrl: error from js tree - ' + angular.toJson(error));
},
check_callback : true,
worker : true
},
version : 1
};
this.reCreateTree = function() {
this.treeConfig.version++;
}
- The reason I am using the version property is because it is not a JsTree config property, so it will not effect the tree.
- Install Node.js and NPM (should come with)
- Install global dev dependencies:
npm install -g grunt-cli karma
- Install local dev dependencies:
npm install
while current directory is ngJsTree - Install javascript dependencies:
bower install
while current directory is ngJsTree
- Build the whole project:
grunt
- this will runjshint
andtest
and will build the project
- Run test:
grunt watch
MIT