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Bindonce

High performance binding for AngularJs

Usage

  • download, clone or fork it or install it using bower bower install angular-bindonce
  • Include the bindonce.js script provided by this component into your app.
  • Add 'pasvaz.bindonce' as a module dependency to your app: angular.module('app', ['pasvaz.bindonce'])

Overview

AngularJs provides a great data binding system but if you abuse of it the page can run into some performance issues, it's known that more of 2000 watchers can lag the UI and that amount can be reached easily if you don't pay attention to the data-binding. Sometime you really need to bind your data using watchers, especially for SPA because the data are updated in real time, but often you can avoid it with some efforts, most of the data presented in your page, once rendered, are immutable so you shouldn't keep watching them for changes.

For instance, take a look to this snippet:

<ul>
	<li ng-repeat="person in Persons">
		<a ng-href="#/people/{{person.id}}"><img ng-src="{{person.imageUrl}}"></a>
		<a ng-href="#/people/{{person.id}}"><span ng-bind="person.name"></span></a>
		<p ng-class="{'cycled':person.generated}" ng-bind-html-unsafe="person.description"></p>
	</li>
</ul>

Angular internally creates a $watch for each ng-* directive in order to keep the data up to date, so in this example just for displaying few info it creates 6 + 1 (ngRepeatWatch) watchers per person, even if the person is supposed to remain the same once shown. Iterate this amount for each person and you can have an idea about how easy is to reach 2000 watchers. Now if you need it because those data could change while you show the page or are bound to some models, it's ok. But most of the time they are static data that don't change once rendered. This is where bindonce can really help you.

The above example done with bindonce:

<ul>
	<li bindonce ng-repeat="person in Persons">
		<a bo-href="'#/people/' + person.id"><img bo-src="person.imageUrl"></a>
		<a bo-href="'#/people/' + person.id" bo-text="person.name"></a>
		<p bo-class="{'cycled':person.generated}" bo-html="person.description"></p>
	</li>
</ul>

Now this example uses 0 watches per person and renders exactly the same result as the above that uses ng-*. (Angular still uses 1 watcher for ngRepeatWatch)

The smart approach

OK until here nothing completely new, with a bit of efforts you could create your own directive and render the person inside the link function, or you could use watch fighters that has a similar approach, but there is still one problem that you have to face and bindonce already handles it: the existence of the data when the directive renders the content. Usually the directives, unless you use watchers or bind their attributes to the scope (still a watcher), render the content when they are loaded into the markup, if at that given time your data are not available the directive can't render it. Bindonce can wait until the data are ready before to render the content. Let's give a look to the follow snippet to better understand the concept:

<span my-custom-set-text="Person.firstname"></span>
<span my-custom-set-text="Person.lastname"></span>
...
<script>
angular.module('testApp', [])
.directive('myCustomSetText', function () {
	return {
		link:function (scope, elem, attr, ctrl) {
			elem.text(scope.$eval(attr.myCustomSetText));
		}
	}
});
</script>

This basic directive works as expected, it renders the Person datas and it doesn't use any watcher. However, if Person is not yet available inside the $scope when the page is loaded (say we get Person via $http or via $resource), the directive is useless, scope.$eval(attr.myCustomSetText) renders just nothing and exit.

Here is how we can solve this issue with bindonce:

<div bindonce="Person" bo-title="Person.title">
	<span bo-text="Person.firstname"></span>
	<span bo-text="Person.lastname"></span>
	<img bo-src="Person.picture" bo-alt="Person.title">
	<p bo-class="{'fancy':Person.isNice}" bo-html="Person.story"></p>
</div>

bindonce="Person" does the trick, any bo-* attribute belonging to bindonce waits until the parent bindonce="{somedata}" is validated and only then it renders its content. Once the scope contains the value Person then every bo-* children get filled with the proper values. In order to accomplish this task, bindonce uses just one temporary watcher, no matters how many children need to be rendered. As soon as it gets Person the watcher is properly removed. If the $scope contains already the data bindonce is looking for, then it doesn't create the temporary watcher and starts rendering its children.

You may have noticed that the first example didn't use any value with the attribute bindonce:

<ul>
	<li bindonce ng-repeat="person in Persons">
	...

when used with ng-repeat bindonce doesn't need to check if person is defined because ng-repeat creates the directives only when person exists, anyway you can use <li bindonce="person" ng-repeat="person in Persons"> it doesn't make any difference.

Interpolation

Some directives (ng-href, ng-src) use interpolation, ie: ng-href="/profile/{{User.profileId}}". Both ng-href and ng-src have the bo-* equivalent directives: bo-href-i and bo-src-i (pay attention to the -i, it means interpolate), as expected they don't use watchers however Angular creates one watcher for every interpolation, for instance bo-href-i="/profile/{{User.profileId}}" set the element's href once, as expected, but Angular keeps a watcher active on {{User.profileId}} even if bo-href-i doesn't use it. That's why by default the bo-href doesn't use interpolation nor watchers, the above equivalent with 0 watchers would be bo-href="'/profile/' + User.profileId". Never the less bo-href-i and bo-src-i are still maintained for compatibility reasons.

Attribute Usage

attribute Description Example
bindonce="{somedata}" bindonce is the main directive, {somedata} is optional, if it's present it forces bindonce to wait until somedata is defined before to render its children bindonce="Person"
bo-if = "condition" equivalent to ng-if but doesn't use watchers <ANY bo-if="Person.isPublic"></ANY>
bo-show = "condition" equivalent to ng-show but doesn't use watchers <ANY bo-show="Person.isPublic"></ANY>
bo-hide = "condition" equivalent to ng-hide but doesn't use watchers <ANY bo-hide="Person.isPrivate"></ANY>
bo-text = "text" evaluates "text" and print it as text inside the element bo-text="Person.name"
bo-html = "markup" evaluates "markup" and render it as html inside the element bo-html="Person.description"
bo-href-i = "url" equivalent to ng-href. Heads up! It creates one watcher. Using {{}} inside the url like <a bo-href="/profile{{Person.id}}"> you create one watcher, use bo-href to avoid it: <a bo-href="'/profile' + Person.id"> <a bo-href-i="/profile{{Person.id}}"></a>
bo-href = "url" similar to ng-href but doesn't allow interpolation using {{}} like ng-href. Heads up! You can't use interpolation {{}} inside the url, use bo-href-i for that purpose <a bo-href="'/profile' + Person.id"></a> or <a bo-href="link" bo-text="Link"></a>
bo-src-i = "url" equivalent to ng-src. Heads up! It creates one watcher <img bo-src-i="{{picture}}" bo-alt="title">
bo-src = "url" similar to ng-src but doesn't allow interpolation using {{}} like ng-src. Heads up! You can't use interpolation {{}}, use bo-src-i for that purpose <img bo-src="picture" bo-alt="title">
bo-class = "class:condition" equivalent to ng-class but doesn't use watchers <span bo-class="{'fancy':Person.condition}">
bo-alt = "text" evaluates "text" and render it as alt for the element <ANY bo-alt="title">
bo-title = "text" evaluates "text" and render it as title for the element <ANY bo-title="title">
bo-id = "text" evaluates "text" and render it as id for the element <ANY bo-id="id">
bo-style = "text" equivalent to ng-style but doesn't use watchers <ANY bo-style="{color:red}">
bo-value = "text" evaluates "text" and render it as value for the element <input type="radio" bo-value="value">
bo-attr bo-attr-foo = "text" evaluates "text" and render it as a custom attribute for the element <div bo-attr bo-attr-foo="bar"></div>

Todo

Examples and Tests

License

MIT