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#angular-growl

growl like notifications for angularJS projects, using bootstrap alert classes

##Features

Standard bootstrap 2.x styles

  • growl like notifications like in MacOS X
  • using standard bootstrap classes (alert, alert-info, alert-error, alert-success)
  • global or per message configuration of a timeout when message will be automatically closed
  • automatic translation of messages if angular-translate filter is present, you only have to provide keys as messages, angular-translate will translate them
  • pre-defined $http-Interceptor to automatically handle $http responses for server-sent messages
  • automatic CSS animations when adding/closing notifications (only when using >= angularJS 1.2)
  • < 1 kB after GZIP

##Changelog

0.3.0 - 26th Sept 2013

  • adding css animations support via ngAnimate (for angularJS >= 1.2)
  • ability to configure server message keys

0.2.0 - 22nd Sept 2013

  • reworking, bugfixing and documenting handling of server sent messages/notifications
  • externalizing css styles of growl class
  • provide minified versions of js and css files in build folder

0.1.3 - 20th Sept 2013

  • introducing ttl config option, fixes #2

##Installation

You can install angular-growl with bower:

bower install angular-growl

Alternatively you can download the files in the build folder manually and include them in your project.

<html>
    <head>
        <link href="bootstrap.min.css" rel="stylesheet">
        <script src="angular.min.js"></script>

        <link href="angular-growl.css" rel="stylesheet">
        <script src="angular-growl.js"></script>
    </head>
</html>

As angular-growl is based on its own angularJS module, you have to alter your dependency list when creating your application module:

var app = angular.module('myApp', ['angular-growl']);

Finally, you have to include the directive somewhere in your HTML like this:

<body>
    <div growl></div>
</body>

##Usage

Just let angular inject the growl Factory into your code and call the 4 functions that the factory provides accordingly:

app.controller("demoCtrl", ['$scope', 'growl', function($scope, growl) {
    $scope.addSpecialWarnMessage = function() {
        growl.addWarnMessage("This adds a warn message");
        growl.addInfoMessage("This adds a info message");
        growl.addSuccessMessage("This adds a success message");
        growl.addErrorMessage("This adds a error message");
    }
}]);

If angular-translate is present, its filter is automatically called for translating of messages, so you have to provide only the key:

app.controller("demoCtrl", ['$scope', 'growl', function($scope, growl) {
    $scope.addSpecialWarnMessage = function() {
        growl.addSuccessMessage("SAVE_SUCCESS_MESSAGE");
        growl.addErrorMessage("VALIDATION_ERROR");
    }
}]);

##Configuration

###Automatic closing of notifications (timeout, ttl) Standard behaviour is, that all notifications need to be closed manually by the user.

However, you can configure a global timeout (TTL) after which notifications should be automatically closed. To do this, you have to configure this during config phase of angular bootstrap like this:

var app = angular.module('myApp', ['angular-growl']);

app.config(['growlProvider', function(growlProvider) {
    growlProvider.globalTimeToLive(5000);
}]);

This sets a global timeout of 5 seconds after which every notification will be closed.

You can override TTL generally for every single message if you want:

app.controller("demoCtrl", ['$scope', 'growl', function($scope, growl) {
    $scope.addSpecialWarnMessage = function() {
        growl.addWarnMessage("Override global ttl setting", {ttl: 10000});
    }
}]);

This sets a 10 second timeout, after which the notification will be automatically closed.

If you have set a global TTL, you can disable automatic closing of single notifications by setting their ttl to -1:

app.controller("demoCtrl", ['$scope', 'growl', function($scope, growl) {
    $scope.addSpecialWarnMessage = function() {
        growl.addWarnMessage("this will not be closed automatically even when a global ttl is set", {ttl: -1});
    }
}]);

###Animations

Beginning with angularJS 1.2 growl messages can be automatically animated with CSS animations when adding and/or closing them. All you have to do is load the angular-animate.js provided by angularJS and add ngAnimate to your applications dependency list:

<html>
    <head>
        <link href="bootstrap.min.css" rel="stylesheet">
        <script src="angular.min.js"></script>
        <script src="angular-animate.min.js"></script>

        <link href="angular-growl.css" rel="stylesheet">
        <script src="angular-growl.js"></script>
    </head>
</html>
var app = angular.module('myApp', ['angular-growl', 'ngAnimate']);

That's it. The angular-growl.css comes with a pre-defined animation of 0.5s to opacity.

To configure the animations, just change the growl-item.* classes in the css file to your preference. F.i. to change length of animation from 0.5s to 1s do this:

.growl-item.ng-enter,
.growl-item.ng-leave {
    -webkit-transition:1s linear all;
    -moz-transition:1s linear all;
    -o-transition:1s linear all;
    transition:1s linear all;
}

Basically you can style your animations just as you like if ngAnimate can pick it up automatically. See the ngAnimate docs for more info.

###Handling of server sent notifications

When doing $http requests, you can configure angular-growl to look automatically for messages in $http responses, so your business logic on the server is able to send messages/notifications to the client and you can display them automagically:

var app = angular.module('myApp', ['angular-growl']);

app.config(['growlProvider', '$httpProvider', function(growlProvider, $httpProvider) {
    $httpProvider.responseInterceptors.push(growlProvider.serverMessagesInterceptor);
}]);

This adds a pre-defined angularJS HTTP interceptor that is called on every HTTP request and looks if response contains messages. Interceptor looks in response for a "messages" array of objects with "text" and "severity" key. This is an example response which results in 3 growl messages:

{
    "someOtherData": {...},
	"messages": [
		{"text":"this is a server message", "severity": "warn"},
		{"text":"this is another server message", "severity": "info"},
		{"text":"and another", "severity": "error"}
	]
}

You can configure the keys, the interceptor is looking for like this:

var app = angular.module("demo", ["angular-growl"]);

app.config(["growlProvider", "$httpProvider", function(growlProvider, $httpProvider) {
	growlProvider.messagesKey("my-messages");
	growlProvider.messageTextKey("messagetext");
	growlProvider.messageSeverityKey("severity-level");
	$httpProvider.responseInterceptors.push(growlProvider.serverMessagesInterceptor);
}]);

Server messages will be created with default TTL.

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growl-like notifications for angularJS projects

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