angular.js/docs/content/tutorial/step_08.ngdoc
Pete Bacon Darwin ef334d0070 docs(tutorial): testacular renamed to karma
Replaced instances of 'Testacular' with 'Karma' to reflect name change of test runner.
Replaced instances of 'http://vojtajina.github.com/testacular' with 'http://karma-runner.github.io/' to reflect dedicated page for Karma Test Runner.
Added location of config file needed to start the Karma server. This is still labeled 'testacular.conf.js' and needs file name to be updated in the phone example repo.
2013-04-15 12:30:33 +01:00

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@ngdoc overview
@name Tutorial: 8 - More Templating
@description
<ul doc-tutorial-nav="8"></ul>
In this step, you will implement the phone details view, which is displayed when a user clicks on a
phone in the phone list.
<div doc-tutorial-reset="8"></div>
Now when you click on a phone on the list, the phone details page with phone-specific information
is displayed.
To implement the phone details view we will use {@link api/ng.$http $http} to fetch
our data, and we'll flesh out the `phone-detail.html` view template.
The most important changes are listed below. You can see the full diff on {@link
https://github.com/angular/angular-phonecat/compare/step-7...step-8
GitHub}:
## Data
In addition to `phones.json`, the `app/phones/` directory also contains one json file for each
phone:
__`app/phones/nexus-s.json`:__ (sample snippet)
<pre>
{
"additionalFeatures": "Contour Display, Near Field Communications (NFC),...",
"android": {
"os": "Android 2.3",
"ui": "Android"
},
...
"images": [
"img/phones/nexus-s.0.jpg",
"img/phones/nexus-s.1.jpg",
"img/phones/nexus-s.2.jpg",
"img/phones/nexus-s.3.jpg"
],
"storage": {
"flash": "16384MB",
"ram": "512MB"
}
}
</pre>
Each of these files describes various properties of the phone using the same data structure. We'll
show this data in the phone detail view.
## Controller
We'll expand the `PhoneDetailCtrl` by using the `$http` service to fetch the json files. This works
the same way as the phone list controller.
__`app/js/controllers.js`:__
<pre>
function PhoneDetailCtrl($scope, $routeParams, $http) {
$http.get('phones/' + $routeParams.phoneId + '.json').success(function(data) {
$scope.phone = data;
});
}
//PhoneDetailCtrl.$inject = ['$scope', '$routeParams', '$http'];
</pre>
To construct the URL for the HTTP request, we use `$routeParams.phoneId` extracted from the current
route by the `$route` service.
## Template
The TBD placeholder line has been replaced with lists and bindings that comprise the phone details.
Note where we use the angular `{{expression}}` markup and `ngRepeat` to project phone data from
our model into the view.
__`app/partials/phone-detail.html`:__
<pre>
<img ng-src="{{phone.images[0]}}" class="phone">
<h1>{{phone.name}}</h1>
<p>{{phone.description}}</p>
<ul class="phone-thumbs">
<li ng-repeat="img in phone.images">
<img ng-src="{{img}}">
</li>
</ul>
<ul class="specs">
<li>
<span>Availability and Networks</span>
<dl>
<dt>Availability</dt>
<dd ng-repeat="availability in phone.availability">{{availability}}</dd>
</dl>
</li>
...
</li>
<span>Additional Features</span>
<dd>{{phone.additionalFeatures}}</dd>
</li>
</ul>
</pre>
<div style="display: none">
TODO!
<img class="diagram" src="img/tutorial/tutorial_08-09_final.png">
</div>
## Test
We wrote a new unit test that is similar to the one we wrote for the `PhoneListCtrl` controller in
step 5.
__`test/unit/controllersSpec.js`:__
<pre>
...
describe('PhoneDetailCtrl', function(){
var scope, $httpBackend, ctrl;
beforeEach(inject(function(_$httpBackend_, $rootScope, $routeParams, $controller) {
$httpBackend = _$httpBackend_;
$httpBackend.expectGET('phones/xyz.json').respond({name:'phone xyz'});
$routeParams.phoneId = 'xyz';
scope = $rootScope.$new();
ctrl = $controller(PhoneDetailCtrl, {$scope: scope});
}));
it('should fetch phone detail', function() {
expect(scope.phone).toBeUndefined();
$httpBackend.flush();
expect(scope.phone).toEqual({name:'phone xyz'});
});
});
...
</pre>
You should now see the following output in the Karma tab:
Chrome 22.0: Executed 3 of 3 SUCCESS (0.039 secs / 0.012 secs)
We also added a new end-to-end test that navigates to the Nexus S detail page and verifies that the
heading on the page is "Nexus S".
__`test/e2e/scenarios.js`:__
<pre>
...
describe('Phone detail view', function() {
beforeEach(function() {
browser().navigateTo('../../app/index.html#/phones/nexus-s');
});
it('should display nexus-s page', function() {
expect(binding('phone.name')).toBe('Nexus S');
});
});
...
</pre>
You can now rerun `./scripts/e2e-test.sh` or refresh the browser tab with the end-to-end test
runner to see the tests run, or you can see them running on {@link
http://angular.github.com/angular-phonecat/step-8/test/e2e/runner.html
Angular's server}.
# Experiments
* Using the {@link guide/dev_guide.e2e-testing Angular's end-to-end test runner API}, write a test
that verifies that we display 4 thumbnail images on the Nexus S details page.
# Summary
Now that the phone details view is in place, proceed to {@link step_09 step 9} to learn how to
write your own custom display filter.
<ul doc-tutorial-nav="8"></ul>