I got this function in my core
component:
isValid(value: any) { // Do some stuff and return something based on the result return false; }
Which I pass to the other-component
like this:
<other-component (onBeforeAdding)="isValid($event)"></other-component>
And in other-component
I got this EventEmitter
function which should run before other things and return a value stating that a value is valid or not:
@Output() onBeforeAdding: EventEmitter<any> = new EventEmitter(); let isValid = this.onBeforeAdding.emit(value) || true; if (isValid) { // Do stuff }
The problem here is that an EventEmitter
function can't return a value since it's asynchronous (although from rc2 it seems that this is optional by passing true to the new EventEmitter
function? Even doing so won't fix this issue however). So isValid
will always be true regardless of what the function returns.
How can I return a value from the EventEmitter
function?
The problem here is that an EventEmitter function can't return a value since it's asynchronous (although from rc2 it seems that this is optional by passing true to the new EventEmitter function? Even doing so won't fix this issue however). So isValid will always be true regardless of what the function returns.
Return EventEmitter from a function In the above LoopProcessor() function, first we create an object of EventEmitter class and then use it to emit 'BeforeProcess' and 'AfterProcess' events. Finally, we return an object of EventEmitter from the function.
Simply use it to emit events from your component. Take a look a the following example. @Component({ selector : 'child', template : ` <button (click)="sendNotification()">Notify my parent! </button> ` }) class Child { @Output() notifyParent: EventEmitter<any> = new EventEmitter(); sendNotification() { this.
The short answer is you can't do this with @Output
, but you can do something very similar with @Input
.
Same function in core
component:
isValid(value: any): boolean { // Do some stuff and return something based on the result return false; }
Pass the function definition in to other-component
as an @Input
:
<other-component [onBeforeAddingProcessor]="isValid"></other-component>
In other-component
:
@Input() onBeforeAddingProcessor: (value: any) => boolean; ngOnInit() { // onBeforeAddingProcessor won't be defined in the constructor let isValid = this.onBeforeAddingProcessor(value); if (isValid) { // Do stuff } }
this
If you have to access this
in the function you provide, then it's necessary to pass a method which already has the this-context bound:
isValid = (value: any) => { return this.myService.checkValue(value); }
Otherwise Angular calls the method with this
of the component, not the consumer of the component. Small hint regarding performance (though not tested): if this method is large and the instance-count of the component is high, then you should factor out the bigger parts of the code to a private member function and call this function from where it was factored out. Reason: Above does not create a function on the prototype of the class, but stamps out a copy of this function for each instance of the component. This can consume a lot of memory which can be avoided easily.
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