I have one auto-carousel directive which iterates through the linked element's children.
The children however are not yet loaded in the DOM, because their ng-ifs expressions have not been parsed yet.
How can I make sure the parent directive knows there have been changes to it's DOM tree?
<ul class="unstyled" auto-carousel> <li class="slide" ng-if="name">{{name}}</li> ... <li class="slide" ng-if="email">{{email}}</li> </ul> I could use $timeout but that feels unreliable. I could also use ng-show instead of ng-if but that does not answer the question and not what I need.
So here's what I ended up doing:
I discovered you could pass a function to $scope.$watch. From there, it's pretty straightforward to return the value of the expression you want to watch for changes. It will work exactly like passing a key string for a property on the scope.
link: function ($scope, $el, $attrs) { $scope.$watch( function () { return $el[0].childNodes.length; }, function (newValue, oldValue) { if (newValue !== oldValue) { // code goes here } } ); } I am watching childNodes, not children, because the childNodes list holds elements as well as text nodes and comments. This is priceless because Angular uses comment placeholders for directives like ng-repeat, ng-if, ng-switch and ng-include which perform transclusion and alter the DOM, while children only holds elements.
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