How To Set Dynamic Height At Element With Angular Directive π
Nikos Anifantis
Posted on March 19, 2021
The Problem
Interactive web designs require elements with dynamic height that depends on their location in the window viewport. More specifically, their height starts at the top offset position of the element inside the window and ends at the end of the window. In this article we will try to implement dynamic height using Angular directives.
Implementation
Create New Angular Directive
First of all, we create an Angular directive by injecting the the native element from ElementRef
.
@Directive({
selector: "[fluidHeight]",
})
export class FluidHeightDirective implements AfterViewInit {
@Input("fluidHeight") topOffset: number;
// ...
private domElement: HTMLElement;
constructor(private elementRef: ElementRef) {
this.domElement = this.elementRef.nativeElement as HTMLElement;
// ...
}
}
Calculate Top Offset Of The Element
The next step is to calculate the top offset of the HTML element depending on the window. We use the .getBoundingClientRect()
method that returns a DOMRect object which is the smallest rectangle which contains the entire element, including its padding and border-width.
private calcTopOffset(): number {
try {
const rect = this.domElement.getBoundingClientRect();
const scrollTop =
window.pageYOffset || document.documentElement.scrollTop;
return rect.top + scrollTop;
} catch (e) {
return 0;
}
}
Set Dynamic Height To Element
This method sets the calculated height to the host HTML element, using the Angular Renderer (Renderer2
). If the user knows the to offset we don't need to recalculate it.
private setHeight() {
const windowHeight = window?.innerHeight;
const topOffset = this.topOffset || this.calcTopOffset();
let height = windowHeight - topOffset;
// set min height instead of the calculated
if (this.minHeight && height < this.minHeight) {
height = this.minHeight;
}
this.renderer.setStyle(this.domElement, 'height', `${height}px`);
}
Observe Window Resize
We need to observe the window resize event in order to calculate the height on any change. We use the fromEvent
method from rxjs
to register at window's resize events and it converts them to observable. The problem here is that the events are too many when we resize the window and we have to decrease them. Thus, we use throttleTime
and debounceTime
from rxjs/operators
to minimize the re-calculation of the dynamic height.
Tip: Unsubscribe on destroy to avoid memory leaks.
// register on window resize event
fromEvent(window, "resize")
.pipe(throttleTime(500), debounceTime(500))
.subscribe(() => this.setHeight());
Final Result π
Great, we have done it! We have created an Angular directive that sets dynamic height to its host HTML element in a very short time.
import {
AfterViewInit,
Directive,
ElementRef,
Input,
Renderer2,
} from "@angular/core";
import { fromEvent } from "rxjs";
import { debounceTime, throttleTime } from "rxjs/operators";
@Directive({
selector: "[fluidHeight]",
})
export class FluidHeightDirective implements AfterViewInit {
@Input() minHeight: number;
@Input("fluidHeight") topOffset: number;
private domElement: HTMLElement;
constructor(private renderer: Renderer2, private elementRef: ElementRef) {
this.domElement = this.elementRef.nativeElement as HTMLElement;
// register on window resize event
fromEvent(window, "resize")
.pipe(throttleTime(500), debounceTime(500))
.subscribe(() => this.setHeight());
}
ngAfterViewInit() {
this.setHeight();
}
private setHeight() {
const windowHeight = window?.innerHeight;
const topOffset = this.topOffset || this.calcTopOffset();
let height = windowHeight - topOffset;
// set min height instead of the calculated
if (this.minHeight && height < this.minHeight) {
height = this.minHeight;
}
this.renderer.setStyle(this.domElement, "height", `${height}px`);
}
private calcTopOffset(): number {
try {
const rect = this.domElement.getBoundingClientRect();
const scrollTop =
window.pageYOffset || document.documentElement.scrollTop;
return rect.top + scrollTop;
} catch (e) {
return 0;
}
}
}
We made it to the end!πππ Hope you found this article helpful! π
Posted on March 19, 2021
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