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How can I select an element in a component template?

Does anybody know how to get hold of an element defined in a component template? Polymer makes it really easy with the $ and $$.

I was just wondering how to go about it in Angular.

Take the example from the tutorial:

import {Component} from '@angular/core';

@Component({
    selector:'display',
    template:`
     <input #myname (input)="updateName(myname.value)"/>
     <p>My name : {{myName}}</p>
     `   
})
export class DisplayComponent {
    myName: string = "Aman";
    updateName(input: String) {
        this.myName = input;
    }
}

How do I catch hold or get a reference of the p or input element from within the class definition?


G
Günter Zöchbauer

Instead of injecting ElementRef and using querySelector or similar from there, a declarative way can be used instead to access elements in the view directly:

<input #myname>
@ViewChild('myname') input; 

element

ngAfterViewInit() {
  console.log(this.input.nativeElement.value);
}

StackBlitz example

@ViewChild() supports directive or component type as parameter, or the name (string) of a template variable.

@ViewChildren() also supports a list of names as comma separated list (currently no spaces allowed @ViewChildren('var1,var2,var3')).

@ContentChild() and @ContentChildren() do the same but in the light DOM ( projected elements).

descendants

@ContentChildren() is the only one that allows to also query for descendants

@ContentChildren(SomeTypeOrVarName, {descendants: true}) someField; 

{descendants: true} should be the default but is not in 2.0.0 final and it's considered a bug
This was fixed in 2.0.1

read

If there are a component and directives the read parameter allows to specify which instance should be returned.

For example ViewContainerRef that is required by dynamically created components instead of the default ElementRef

@ViewChild('myname', { read: ViewContainerRef }) target;

subscribe changes

Even though view children are only set when ngAfterViewInit() is called and content children are only set when ngAfterContentInit() is called, if you want to subscribe to changes of the query result, it should be done in ngOnInit()

https://github.com/angular/angular/issues/9689#issuecomment-229247134

@ViewChildren(SomeType) viewChildren;
@ContentChildren(SomeType) contentChildren;

ngOnInit() {
  this.viewChildren.changes.subscribe(changes => console.log(changes));
  this.contentChildren.changes.subscribe(changes => console.log(changes));
}

direct DOM access

can only query DOM elements, but not components or directive instances:

export class MyComponent {
  constructor(private elRef:ElementRef) {}
  ngAfterViewInit() {
    var div = this.elRef.nativeElement.querySelector('div');
    console.log(div);
  }

  // for transcluded content
  ngAfterContentInit() {
    var div = this.elRef.nativeElement.querySelector('div');
    console.log(div);
  }
}

get arbitrary projected content

See Access transcluded content


The angular teams advised against using ElementRef, this is the better solution.
Actually input also is an ElementRef, but you get the reference to the element you actually want, instead of querying it from the host ElementRef.
Actually using ElementRef is just fine. Also using ElementRef.nativeElement with Renderer is fine. What is discouraged is accessing properties of ElementRef.nativeElement.xxx directly.
@Natanael I don't know if or where this is explicitly documented but it is mentioned regularly in issues or other discussions (also from Angular team members) that direct DOM access should be avoided. Accessing the DOM directly (which is what accessing properties and methods of ElementRef.nativeElement) is, prevents you from using Angulars server side rendering and WebWorker feature (I don't know if it also breaks the upcoming offline template compiler - but I guess not).
As mentioned above in the read section, if you want to get the nativeElement for an element with ViewChild, you have to do the following: @ViewChild('myObj', { read: ElementRef }) myObj: ElementRef;
u
user3761308

You can get a handle to the DOM element via ElementRef by injecting it into your component's constructor:

constructor(private myElement: ElementRef) { ... }

Docs: https://angular.io/docs/ts/latest/api/core/index/ElementRef-class.html


@Brocco can you update your answer? I'd like to see a current solution since ElementRef is gone.
ElementRef is available (again?).
link Use this API as the last resort when direct access to DOM is needed. Use templating and data-binding provided by Angular instead. Alternatively you take a look at Renderer which provides API that can safely be used even when direct access to native elements is not supported. Relying on direct DOM access creates tight coupling between your application and rendering layers which will make it impossible to separate the two and deploy your application into a web worker.
@sandeeptalabathula What is a better option for finding an element to attach a floating date picker component from a third-party library to? I'm aware that this wasn't the original question, but you make it out that finding elements in the DOM is bad in all scenarios...
@john Ah.. okay. You may try out this - this.element.nativeElement.querySelector('#someElementId') and pass ElementRef to the constructor like this.. private element: ElementRef, Import lib... import { ElementRef } from '@angular/core';
g
gdi2290
import { Component, ElementRef, OnInit } from '@angular/core';

@Component({
  selector:'display',
  template:`
   <input (input)="updateName($event.target.value)">
   <p> My name : {{ myName }}</p>
  `
})
class DisplayComponent implements OnInit {
  constructor(public element: ElementRef) {
    this.element.nativeElement // <- your direct element reference 
  }
  ngOnInit() {
    var el = this.element.nativeElement;
    console.log(el);
  }
  updateName(value) {
    // ...
  }
}

Example updated to work with the latest version

For more details on native element, here


N
Neil T.

Angular 4+: Use renderer.selectRootElement with a CSS selector to access the element.

I've got a form that initially displays an email input. After the email is entered, the form will be expanded to allow them to continue adding information relating to their project. However, if they are not an existing client, the form will include an address section above the project information section.

As of now, the data entry portion has not been broken up into components, so the sections are managed with *ngIf directives. I need to set focus on the project notes field if they are an existing client, or the first name field if they are new.

I tried the solutions with no success. However, Update 3 in this answer gave me half of the eventual solution. The other half came from MatteoNY's response in this thread. The result is this:

import { NgZone, Renderer } from '@angular/core';

constructor(private ngZone: NgZone, private renderer: Renderer) {}

setFocus(selector: string): void {
    this.ngZone.runOutsideAngular(() => {
        setTimeout(() => {
            this.renderer.selectRootElement(selector).focus();
        }, 0);
    });
}

submitEmail(email: string): void {
    // Verify existence of customer
    ...
    if (this.newCustomer) {
        this.setFocus('#firstname');
    } else {
        this.setFocus('#description');
    }
}

Since the only thing I'm doing is setting the focus on an element, I don't need to concern myself with change detection, so I can actually run the call to renderer.selectRootElement outside of Angular. Because I need to give the new sections time to render, the element section is wrapped in a timeout to allow the rendering threads time to catch up before the element selection is attempted. Once all that is setup, I can simply call the element using basic CSS selectors.

I know this example dealt primarily with the focus event, but it's hard for me that this couldn't be used in other contexts.

UPDATE: Angular dropped support for Renderer in Angular 4 and removed it completely in Angular 9. This solution should not be impacted by the migration to Renderer2. Please refer to this link for additional information: Renderer migration to Renderer2


The class Renderer is DEPRECATED since Angular 4.3.0. angular.io/api/core/Renderer
Can't we just use Renderer2 @Jamie ? https://angular.io/api/core/Renderer2#selectRootElement
j
jsgoupil

For people trying to grab the component instance inside a *ngIf or *ngSwitchCase, you can follow this trick.

Create an init directive.

import {
    Directive,
    EventEmitter,
    Output,
    OnInit,
    ElementRef
} from '@angular/core';

@Directive({
    selector: '[init]'
})
export class InitDirective implements OnInit {
    constructor(private ref: ElementRef) {}

    @Output() init: EventEmitter<ElementRef> = new EventEmitter<ElementRef>();

    ngOnInit() {
        this.init.emit(this.ref);
    }
}

Export your component with a name such as myComponent

@Component({
    selector: 'wm-my-component',
    templateUrl: 'my-component.component.html',
    styleUrls: ['my-component.component.css'],
    exportAs: 'myComponent'
})
export class MyComponent { ... }

Use this template to get the ElementRef AND MyComponent instance

<div [ngSwitch]="type">
    <wm-my-component
           #myComponent="myComponent"
           *ngSwitchCase="Type.MyType"
           (init)="init($event, myComponent)">
    </wm-my-component>
</div>

Use this code in TypeScript

init(myComponentRef: ElementRef, myComponent: MyComponent) {
}

P
Prashant Pimpale

import the ViewChild decorator from @angular/core, like so:

HTML Code:

<form #f="ngForm"> 
  ... 
  ... 
</form>

TS Code:

import { ViewChild } from '@angular/core';

class TemplateFormComponent {

  @ViewChild('f') myForm: any;
    .
    .
    .
}

now you can use 'myForm' object to access any element within it in the class.

Source


But you should notice that you almost not need to access template elements in the component class, you just need to well understand the angular logic correctly.
Dont use any, the type is ElementRef
I ended up having to use 'any' because the element that I needed access to was another angular component which was wrapping a Kendo UI element, I needed to call a method on the component, which then calls a method on the Kendo element.
K
Komal12
 */
import {Component,ViewChild} from '@angular/core' /*Import View Child*/

@Component({
    selector:'display'
    template:`

     <input #myname (input) = "updateName(myname.value)"/>
     <p> My name : {{myName}}</p>

    `
})
export class DisplayComponent{
  @ViewChild('myname')inputTxt:ElementRef; /*create a view child*/

   myName: string;

    updateName: Function;
    constructor(){

        this.myName = "Aman";
        this.updateName = function(input: String){

            this.inputTxt.nativeElement.value=this.myName; 

            /*assign to it the value*/
        };
    }
}

Please provide some explanation to this code. Simply code dumping without explanation is highly discouraged.
This won't work: attributes set via @ViewChild annotations will only be available after ngAfterViewInit lifecycle event. Accessing the value in the constructor would yield an undefined value for inputTxt in that case.
S
Sunderam Dubey

I have used two way:

First way :

You can get a handle to the DOM element via ElementRef by injecting it into your component's constructor:

constructor(private myElement: ElementRef) {
this.myElement.nativeElement // <- your direct element reference
}

Second way:

@Component({
  selector: 'my-app',
  template:
  `
  <input #input value="enterThere">
  `,
  styleUrls: [ './app.component.css' ]
})
export class AppComponent  {
  @ViewChild('input') input:ElementRef; 

  ngAfterViewInit() {
    console.log(this.input);
  }

A
Aluan Haddad

Note: This doesn't apply to Angular 6 and above as ElementRef became ElementRef<T> with T denoting the type of nativeElement.

I would like to add that if you are using ElementRef, as recommended by all answers, then you will immediately encounter the problem that ElementRef has an awful type declaration that looks like

export declare class ElementRef {
  nativeElement: any;
}

this is stupid in a browser environment where nativeElement is an HTMLElement.

To workaround this you can use the following technique

import {Inject, ElementRef as ErrorProneElementRef} from '@angular/core';

interface ElementRef {
  nativeElement: HTMLElement;
}

@Component({...}) export class MyComponent {
  constructor(@Inject(ErrorProneElementRef) readonly elementRef: ElementRef) { }
}

This explains a problem I was having. This doesn't work because it'll say item needs to be an ElementRef, even though you're setting it to another ElementRef: let item:ElementRef, item2:ElementRef; item = item2; // no can do. . Very confusing. But this is fine: let item:ElementRef, item2:ElementRef; item = item2.nativeElement because of the implementation you pointed out.
Actually your first example let item: ElementRef, item2: ElementRef; item = item2 fails because of definite assignment analysis. Your second fails for the same reasons but both succeed if item2 is initialized for the reasons discussed (or as a useful quick check for assignability we can use declare let here). Regardless, truly a shame to see any on a public API like this.
W
Willem van der Veen

Mimimum example for quick usage:

import { Component, ElementRef, ViewChild} from '@angular/core';

@Component({
  selector: 'my-app',
  template:
  `
  <input #inputEl value="hithere">
  `,
  styleUrls: [ './app.component.css' ]
})
export class AppComponent  {
  @ViewChild('inputEl') inputEl:ElementRef; 

  ngAfterViewInit() {
    console.log(this.inputEl);
  }
}

Put a template reference variable on the DOM element of interest. In our example this is the #inputEl on the tag. In our component class inject the DOM element via the @ViewChild decorator Access the element in the ngAfterViewInit lifecycle hook.

Note:

If you want to manipulate the DOM elements use the Renderer2 API instead of accessing the elements directly. Permitting direct access to the DOM can make your application more vulnerable to XSS attacks


A
Apoorv

to get the immediate next sibling ,use this

event.source._elementRef.nativeElement.nextElementSibling

S
Stphane

Selecting target element from the list. It is easy to select particular element from the list of same elements.

component code:

export class AppComponent {
  title = 'app';

  listEvents = [
    {'name':'item1', 'class': ''}, {'name':'item2', 'class': ''},
    {'name':'item3', 'class': ''}, {'name':'item4', 'class': ''}
  ];

  selectElement(item: string, value: number) {
    console.log("item="+item+" value="+value);
    if(this.listEvents[value].class == "") {
      this.listEvents[value].class='selected';
    } else {
      this.listEvents[value].class= '';
    }
  }
}

html code:

<ul *ngFor="let event of listEvents; let i = index">
   <li  (click)="selectElement(event.name, i)" [class]="event.class">
  {{ event.name }}
</li>

css code:

.selected {
  color: red;
  background:blue;
}

T
TomEberhard

For components inside *ngIf, another approach:

The component I wanted to select was inside a div's *ngIf statement, and @jsgoupil's answer above probably works (Thanks @jsgoupil!), but I ended up finding a way to avoid using *ngIf, by using CSS to hide the element.

When the condition in the [className] is true, the div gets displayed, and naming the component using # works and it can be selected from within the typescript code. When the condition is false, it's not displayed, and I don't need to select it anyway.

Component:

@Component({
    selector: 'bla',
    templateUrl: 'bla.component.html',
    styleUrls: ['bla.component.scss']
})
export class BlaComponent implements OnInit, OnDestroy {
    @ViewChild('myComponentWidget', {static: true}) public myComponentWidget: any;
    @Input('action') action: ActionType; // an enum defined in our code. (action could also be declared locally)

constructor() {
   etc;
}

// this lets you use an enum in the HMTL (ActionType.SomeType)
public get actionTypeEnum(): typeOf ActionType {
    return ActionType;
}

public someMethodXYZ: void {
    this.myComponentWidget.someMethod(); // use it like that, assuming the method exists
}

and then in the bla.component.html file:

<div [className]="action === actionTypeEnum.SomeType ? 'show-it' : 'do-not-show'">

    <my-component #myComponentWidget etc></my-component>
</div>
<div>
    <button type="reset" class="bunch-of-classes" (click)="someMethodXYZ()">
        <span>XYZ</span>
    </button>
</div>   

and the CSS file:

 ::ng-deep {
    .show-it {
         display: block;   // example, actually a lot more css in our code
    }
    .do-not-show {
        display: none'; 
    }
}

D
Djidel

In case you are using Angular Material, you can take advantage of cdkFocusInitial directive.

Example: <input matInput cdkFocusInitial>

Read more here: https://material.angular.io/cdk/a11y/overview#regions