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AngularJS Web application development Cookbook

You're reading from   AngularJS Web application development Cookbook Over 90 hands-on recipes to architect performant applications and implement best practices in AngularJS

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Product type Paperback
Published in Dec 2014
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781783283354
Length 346 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Matthew Frisbie Matthew Frisbie
Author Profile Icon Matthew Frisbie
Matthew Frisbie
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Toc

Table of Contents (12) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Maximizing AngularJS Directives 2. Expanding Your Toolkit with Filters and Service Types FREE CHAPTER 3. AngularJS Animations 4. Sculpting and Organizing your Application 5. Working with the Scope and Model 6. Testing in AngularJS 7. Screaming Fast AngularJS 8. Promises 9. What's New in AngularJS 1.3 10. AngularJS Hacks Index

Optimizing the application using reference $watch


Reference watches register a listener that uses strict equality (===) as the comparator, which verifies the congruent object identity or primitive equality. The implication of this is that a change will only be registered if the model the watcher is listening to is assigned to a new object.

How to do it…

The reference watcher should be used when the object's properties are unimportant. It is the most efficient of the $watch types as it only demands top-level object comparison.

The watcher can be created as follows:

$scope.myObj = {
  myPrim: 'Go Bears!',
  myArr: [3,1,4,1,5,9]
};

// watch myObj by reference
$scope.$watch('myObj', function(newVal, oldVal, scope) {
  // callback logic
});

// watch only the myPrim property of myObj by reference
$scope.$watch('myObj.myPrim', function(newVal, oldVal, scope) {
  // callback logic
});

// watch only the second element of myObj.myArr by reference
$scope.$watch('myObj.myArr[1]', function(newVal, oldVal...
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