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This In-Depth Guide will take you through all aspects of the UI-Router and its components and options. If you just need a quick reference guide visit the API Reference

State Manager.

The new $stateProvider works similar to Angular's v1 router, but it focuses purely on state.

The simplest form of state

A state in its simplest form can be added like this (typically within module.config):

// in app-states.js (or whatever you want to name it) $stateProvider.state('contacts', { template: '

My Contacts

' })

Where does the template get inserted?

When a state is activated, its templates are automatically inserted into the ui-view of its parent state's template. If it's a top-level state—which 'contacts' is because it has no parent state–then its parent template is index.html.

Right now, the 'contacts' state won't ever be activated. So let's see how we can activate a state.

Activating a state

There are three main ways to activate a state:

  1. Call $state.go(). High-level convenience method. Learn More
  2. Click a link containing the ui-sref directive. Learn More
  3. Navigate to the url associated with the state. Learn More.

Templates

There are several methods for configuring a state's template.

As seen above, the simplest way to set your template is via the template config property.

$stateProvider.state('contacts', { template: '

My Contacts

' })

Instead of writing the template inline you can load a partial. (This is probably how you'll set templates most of the time.)

$stateProvider.state('contacts', { templateUrl: 'contacts.html' })

templateUrl can also be a function that returns a url. It takes one preset parameter, stateParams, which is not injected.

$stateProvider.state('contacts', { templateUrl: function ($stateParams){ return '/partials/contacts.' + $stateParams.filterBy + '.html'; } })

Or you can use a template provider function which can be injected, has access to locals, and must return template HTML, like this:

$stateProvider.state('contacts', { templateProvider: function ($timeout, $stateParams) { return $timeout(function () { return '

' + $stateParams.contactId + '

' }, 100); } })

If you'd like your <ui-view> to have some default content before it's populated by a state activation, you can do that as well. The contents will be replaced as soon as a state is activated and populates the ui-view with a template.

Some content will load here!

Controllers

You can assign a controller to your template. Warning: The controller will not be instantiated if template is not defined.

You set your controller like this:

$stateProvider.state('contacts', { template: '

{{title}}

', controller: function($scope){ $scope.title = 'My Contacts'; } })

Or if you already have a controller defined on the module, like this:

$stateProvider.state('contacts', { template: ..., controller: 'ContactsCtrl' })

Alternatively using the "controller as" syntax the above becomes:

$stateProvider.state('contacts', { template: '

{{contact.title}}

', controller: function(){ this.title = 'My Contacts'; }, controllerAs: 'contact' })

and

$stateProvider.state('contacts', { template: ..., controller: 'ContactsCtrl as contact' })

Or for more advanced needs you can use the controllerProvider to dynamically return a controller function or string for you:

$stateProvider.state('contacts', { template: ..., controllerProvider: function($stateParams) { var ctrlName = $stateParams.type + "Controller"; return ctrlName; } })

Controllers can use the scope.scope.scope.on() method to listen for events fired by state transitions.

Controllers are instantiated on an as-needed basis, when their corresponding scopes are created, i.e. when the user manually navigates to a state via a URL, $stateProvider will load the correct template into the view, then bind the controller to the template's scope.

Resolve

You can use resolve to provide your controller with content or data that is custom to the state. resolve is an optional map of dependencies which should be injected into the controller.

If any of these dependencies are promises, they will be resolved and converted to a value before the controller is instantiated and the $stateChangeSuccess event is fired.

The resolve property is a map object. The map object contains key/value pairs of:

Examples:

Each of the objects in resolve below must be resolved (via deferred.resolve() if they are a promise) before the controller is instantiated. Notice how each resolve object is injected as a parameter into the controller.

$stateProvider.state('myState', { resolve:{

     // Example using function with simple return value.
     // Since it's not a promise, it resolves immediately.
     simpleObj:  function(){
        return {value: 'simple!'};
     },

     // Example using function with returned promise.
     // This is the typical use case of resolve.
     // You need to inject any services that you are
     // using, e.g. $http in this example
     promiseObj:  function($http){
        // $http returns a promise for the url data
        return $http({method: 'GET', url: '/someUrl'});
     },

     // Another promise example. If you need to do some 
     // processing of the result, use .then, and your 
     // promise is chained in for free. This is another
     // typical use case of resolve.
     promiseObj2:  function($http){
        return $http({method: 'GET', url: '/someUrl'})
           .then (function (data) {
               return doSomeStuffFirst(data);
           });
     },        

     // Example using a service by name as string.
     // This would look for a 'translations' service
     // within the module and return it.
     // Note: The service could return a promise and
     // it would work just like the example above
     translations: "translations",

     // Example showing injection of service into
     // resolve function. Service then returns a
     // promise. Tip: Inject $stateParams to get
     // access to url parameters.
     translations2: function(translations, $stateParams){
         // Assume that getLang is a service method
         // that uses $http to fetch some translations.
         // Also assume our url was "/:lang/home".
         return translations.getLang($stateParams.lang);
     },

     // Example showing returning of custom made promise
     greeting: function($q, $timeout){
         var deferred = $q.defer();
         $timeout(function() {
             deferred.resolve('Hello!');
         }, 1000);
         return deferred.promise;
     }
  },

  // The controller waits for every one of the above items to be
  // completely resolved before instantiation. For example, the
  // controller will not instantiate until promiseObj's promise has 
  // been resolved. Then those objects are injected into the controller
  // and available for use.  
  controller: function($scope, simpleObj, promiseObj, promiseObj2, translations, translations2, greeting){
      $scope.simple = simpleObj.value;

      // You can be sure that promiseObj is ready to use!
      $scope.items = promiseObj.data.items;
      $scope.items = promiseObj2.items;

      $scope.title = translations.getLang("english").title;
      $scope.title = translations2.title;

      $scope.greeting = greeting;
  }

})

Learn more about how resolved dependencies are inherited down to child states.

Attach Custom Data to State Objects

You can attach custom data to the state object (we recommend using a data property to avoid conflicts).

// Example shows an object-based state and a string-based state var contacts = { name: 'contacts', templateUrl: 'contacts.html', data: { customData1: 5, customData2: "blue" }
} $stateProvider .state(contacts) .state('contacts.list', { templateUrl: 'contacts.list.html', data: { customData1: 44, customData2: "red" } })

With the above example states you could access the data like this:

function Ctrl($state){ console.log($state.current.data.customData1) // outputs 5; console.log($state.current.data.customData2) // outputs "blue"; }

Learn more about how custom data properties are inherited down to child states.

onEnter and onExit callbacks

There are also optional 'onEnter' and 'onExit' callbacks that get called when a state becomes active and inactive respectively. The callbacks also have access to all the resolved dependencies.

$stateProvider.state("contacts", { template: '

{{title}}

', resolve: { title: function () { return 'My Contacts' } }, controller: function($scope, title){ $scope.title = title; }, onEnter: function(title){ if(title){ ... do something ... } }, onExit: function(title){ if(title){ ... do something ... } } })

State Change Events

NOTE: State change events are deprecated, DISABLED and replaced by Transition Hooks as of version 1.0 (details)

All these events are fired at the $rootScope level.

Note: Use event.preventDefault() to prevent the transition from happening. rootScope.rootScope.rootScope.on('$stateChangeStart', function(event, toState, toParams, fromState, fromParams, options){ event.preventDefault(); // transitionTo() promise will be rejected with // a 'transition prevented' error })

// somewhere, assume lazy.state has not been defined $state.go("lazy.state", {a:1, b:2}, {inherit:false});

// somewhere else rootScope.rootScope.rootScope.on('$stateNotFound', function(event, unfoundState, fromState, fromParams){ console.log(unfoundState.to); // "lazy.state" console.log(unfoundState.toParams); // {a:1, b:2} console.log(unfoundState.options); // {inherit:false} + default options })

View Load Events

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