Surprisingly, this is usually not a problem, Browsers don’t have problems even with thousands of bindings, unless the expressions are complex. The common answer for how many watchers are ok to have
is 2000
.
Solutions :
It is fairly easy onwards from AngularJS 1.3
, since one-time
bindings are in core now.
- One time Binding of the variables.
We can use One time binding(::)
directive to prevent the watcher to watch the unwanted variables. Here, variable will be watch only once & after that it will not update that variable.
- Stop the digest cycle manually.
HTML :
<ul ng-controller="myCtrl">
<li ng-repeat="item in Lists">{{lots of bindings}}</li>
</ul>
Controller Code :
app.controller('myCtrl', function ($scope, $element) {
$element.on('scroll', function () {
$scope.Lists = getVisibleElements();
$scope.$digest();
});
});
During the $digest
, you are only interested in changes to Lists
object, not changes to individual items. Yet, Angular will still interrogate every single watcher for changes.
directive for stop
and pause
the digest:
app.directive('stopDigest', function () {
return {
link: function (scope) {
var watchers;
scope.$on('stop', function () {
watchers = scope.$$watchers;
scope.$$watchers = [];
});
scope.$on('resume', function () {
if (watchers)
scope.$$watchers = watchers;
});
}
};
});
Now, Controller code should be changed :
<ul ng-controller="listCtrl">
<li stop-digest ng-repeat="item in visibleList">{{lots of bindings}}</li>
</ul>
app.controller('myCtrl', function ($scope, $element) {
$element.on('scroll', function () {
$scope.visibleList = getVisibleElements();
$scope.$broadcast('stop');
$scope.$digest();
$scope.$broadcast('resume');
});
});
Reference Doc : https://coderwall.com/p/d_aisq/speeding-up-angularjs-s-digest-loop
Thanks.