I need to interpolate a value inside of an ngClass expression but I can't get it to work.
I tried these solution which are the only ones that makes sense to me, these two fails with the interpolation:
<button [ngClass]="{'{{namespace}}-mybutton': type === 'mybutton'}"></button> <button [ngClass]="{namespace + '-mybutton': type === 'mybutton'}"></button> This one works with the interpolation but fails with the dynamically added class because the entire string gets added as a class:
<button ngClass="{'{{namespace}}-mybutton': type === 'mybutton'}"></button> So my question is how do you use dynamic classnames in ngClass like this?
10 Answers
Try
<button [ngClass]="type === 'mybutton' ? namespace + '-mybutton' : ''"></button> instead.
or
<button [ngClass]="[type === 'mybutton' ? namespace + '-mybutton' : '']"></button> or even
<button></button> will work but extra benefit of using ngClass is that it does not overwrite other classes that are added by any other method( eg: [class.xyz] directive or class attribute, etc.) as class does.
Angular 9 Update
The new compiler, Ivy, brings more clarity and predictability to what happens when there are different types of class-bindings on the same element. Read More about it here.
ngClass takes three types of input
- Object: each key corresponds to a CSS class name, you can't have dynamic keys, because
key'key'"key"are all same, and[key]is not supported AFAIK. - Array: can only contain list of classes, no conditions, although ternary operator works
- String/ expression: just like normal class attribute
This one should work
<button [ngClass]="{[namespace + '-mybutton']: type === 'mybutton'}"></button> but Angular throws on this syntax. I'd consider this a bug. See also
The others are invalid. You can't use [] together with {{}}. Either one or the other. {{}} binds the result stringified which doesn't lead to the desired result in this case because an object needs to be passed to ngClass.
As workaround the syntax shown by @A_Sing or
<button [ngClass]="type === 'mybutton' ? namespace + '-mybutton' : ''"></button> can be used.
0 <div *ngFor="let celeb of singers"> <p [ngClass]="{ 'text-success':celeb.country === 'USA', 'text-secondary':celeb.country === 'Canada', 'text-danger':celeb.country === 'Puorto Rico', 'text-info':celeb.country === 'India' }">{{ celeb.artist }} ({{ celeb.country }}) </p> </div> Is basically duplication of the other answers - but I didn't get it completely. maybe someone will finally understand it with this example now.
[ngClass]="['svg-icon', 'recolor-' + recolor, size ? 'size-' + size : '']" will result for e.g. in
class="svg-icon recolor-red size-m" i want to mention some important point to bare in mind while implementing class binding.
[ngClass] = "{ 'badge-secondary': somevariable === value1, 'badge-danger': somevariable === value1, 'badge-warning': somevariable === value1, 'badge-warning': somevariable === value1, 'badge-success': somevariable === value1 }" class here is not binding correctly because one condition is to be met, whereas you have two identical classes 'badge-warning' that may have two different condition. To correct this
[ngClass] = "{ 'badge-secondary': somevariable === value1, 'badge-danger': somevariable === value1, 'badge-warning': somevariable === value1 || somevariable === value1, 'badge-success': somevariable === value1 }" This works perfectly!
<div [class.any-class]="condition"></div> Example:
<div [class.hide]="user.isPaid()"></div> The easiest way might be to define a getter in your component.ts. Most importantly, it's one of the recommendations in Angular coding style
// in your component.ts get buttonClasses() { return { [`${this.namespace}-mybutton`]: this.type === 'mybutton' } } <!-- in your component.html --> <button [ngClass]="buttonClasses"></button> Here's an example of something I'm doing for multiple classes with multiple conditions:
[ngClass]="[variableInComponent || !anotherVariableInComponent ? classes.icon.large : classes.icon.small, editing ? classes.icon.editing : '']"
where:
classes is an object containing strings of various classnames. e.g. class.icon.large = "app__icon--large"
It's dynamic! Updates as the conditions update.
0You can use <i [className]="'fa fa-' + data?.icon"> </i>
more elegant solution is to use && (using NgFor and its first, its free to use ur own matching tho):
<div *ngFor="let day of days; let first = first;" [ngClass]="first && ('day--' + day)" </div> will turn out as:
class="day day--monday"