var module = angular.module('testApp', [])
.directive('onFinishRender', function ($timeout) {
return {
restrict: 'A',
link: function (scope, element, attr) {
if (scope.$last === true) {
$timeout(function () {
scope.$emit(attr.onFinishRender);
});
}
}
}
});
Notice that I didn't use .ready()
but rather wrapped it in a $timeout
. $timeout
makes sure it's executed when the ng-repeated elements have REALLY finished rendering (because the $timeout
will execute at the end of the current digest cycle -- and it will also call $apply
internally, unlike setTimeout
). So after the ng-repeat
has finished, we use $emit
to emit an event to outer scopes (sibling and parent scopes).
And then in your controller, you can catch it with $on
:
$scope.$on('ngRepeatFinished', function(ngRepeatFinishedEvent) {
//you also get the actual event object
//do stuff, execute functions -- whatever...
});
With html that looks something like this:
<div ng-repeat="item in items" on-finish-render="ngRepeatFinished">
<div>{{item.name}}}<div>
</div>
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