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AngularJS access parent scope from child controller

I've set up my controllers using data-ng-controller="xyzController as vm"

I have a scenario with parent / child nested controllers. I have no problem accessing parent properties in the nested html by using $parent.vm.property , but I cannot figure out how to access the parent property from within my child controller.

I've tried injecting $scope and then using $scope.$parent.vm.property , but this isn't working?

Can anyone offer advice?

If your HTML is like below you could do something like this:

<div ng-controller="ParentCtrl">
    <div ng-controller="ChildCtrl">
    </div>
</div>

Then you can access the parent scope as follows

function ParentCtrl($scope) {
    $scope.cities = ["NY", "Amsterdam", "Barcelona"];
}

function ChildCtrl($scope) {
    $scope.parentcities = $scope.$parent.cities;
}

If you want to access a parent controller from your view you have to do something like this:

<div ng-controller="xyzController as vm">
   {{$parent.property}}
</div>

See jsFiddle: http://jsfiddle.net/2r728/

Update

Actually since you defined cities in the parent controller your child controller will inherit all scope variables. So theoritically you don't have to call $parent . The above example can also be written as follows:

function ParentCtrl($scope) {
    $scope.cities = ["NY","Amsterdam","Barcelona"];
}

function ChildCtrl($scope) {
    $scope.parentCities = $scope.cities;
}

The AngularJS docs use this approach, here you can read more about the $scope .

Another update

I think this is a better answer to the original poster.

HTML

<div ng-app ng-controller="ParentCtrl as pc">
    <div ng-controller="ChildCtrl as cc">
        <pre>{{cc.parentCities | json}}</pre>
        <pre>{{pc.cities | json}}</pre>
    </div>
</div>

JS

function ParentCtrl() {
    var vm = this;
    vm.cities = ["NY", "Amsterdam", "Barcelona"];
}

function ChildCtrl() {
    var vm = this;
    ParentCtrl.apply(vm, arguments); // Inherit parent control

    vm.parentCities = vm.cities;
}

If you use the controller as method you can also access the parent scope as follows

function ChildCtrl($scope) {
    var vm = this;
    vm.parentCities = $scope.pc.cities; // note pc is a reference to the "ParentCtrl as pc"
}

As you can see there are many different ways in accessing $scopes .

Updated fiddle

 function ParentCtrl() { var vm = this; vm.cities = ["NY", "Amsterdam", "Barcelona"]; } function ChildCtrl($scope) { var vm = this; ParentCtrl.apply(vm, arguments); vm.parentCitiesByScope = $scope.pc.cities; vm.parentCities = vm.cities; } 
 <script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/angularjs/1.2.20/angular.min.js"></script> <div ng-app ng-controller="ParentCtrl as pc"> <div ng-controller="ChildCtrl as cc"> <pre>{{cc.parentCities | json}}</pre> <pre>{{cc.parentCitiesByScope | json }}</pre> <pre>{{pc.cities | json}}</pre> </div> </div> 

I've just checked

$scope.$parent.someProperty

works for me.

and it will be

{{$parent.someProperty}}

for the view.

When you are using as syntax, like ParentController as parentCtrl , to define a controller then to access parent scope variable in child controller use following :

var id = $scope.parentCtrl.id;

Where parentCtrl is name of parent controller using as syntax and id is a variable defined in same controller.

Some times you may need to update parent properties directly within child scope. eg need to save a date and time of parent control after changes by a child controller. eg Code in JSFiddle

HTML

<div ng-app>
<div ng-controller="Parent">
    event.date = {{event.date}} <br/>
    event.time = {{event.time}} <br/>
    <div ng-controller="Child">
        event.date = {{event.date}}<br/>
        event.time = {{event.time}}<br/>
        <br>
        event.date: <input ng-model='event.date'><br>
        event.time: <input ng-model='event.time'><br>
    </div>
</div>

JS

    function Parent($scope) {
       $scope.event = {
        date: '2014/01/1',
        time: '10:01 AM'
       }
    }

    function Child($scope) {

    }

You can also circumvent scope inheritance and store things in the "global" scope.

If you have a main controller in your application which wraps all other controllers, you can install a "hook" to the global scope:

function RootCtrl($scope) {
    $scope.root = $scope;
}

Then in any child controller, you can access the "global" scope with $scope.root . Anything you set here will be globally visible.

Example:

 function RootCtrl($scope) { $scope.root = $scope; } function ChildCtrl($scope) { $scope.setValue = function() { $scope.root.someGlobalVar = 'someVal'; } } function OtherChildCtrl($scope) { } 
 <script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/angularjs/1.2.23/angular.min.js"></script> <div ng-app ng-controller="RootCtrl"> <p ng-controller="ChildCtrl"> <button ng-click="setValue()">Set someGlobalVar</button> </p> <p ng-controller="OtherChildCtrl"> someGlobalVar value: {{someGlobalVar}} </p> </div> 

I believe I had a similar quandary recently

function parentCtrl() {
   var pc = this; // pc stands for parent control
   pc.foobar = 'SomeVal';
}

function childCtrl($scope) {

   // now how do I get the parent control 'foobar' variable?
   // I used $scope.$parent

   var parentFoobarVariableValue = $scope.$parent.pc.foobar;

   // that did it
}

My setup was a little different, but the same thing should probably still work

From a child component you can access the properties and methods of the parent component with 'require'. Here is an example:

Parent:

.component('myParent', mymodule.MyParentComponent)
...
controllerAs: 'vm',
...
var vm = this;
vm.parentProperty = 'hello from parent';

Child:

require: {
    myParentCtrl: '^myParent'
},
controllerAs: 'vm',
...
var vm = this;
vm.myParentCtrl.parentProperty = 'hello from child';

Super easy and works, but not sure why....

angular.module('testing')
  .directive('details', function () {
        return {
              templateUrl: 'components/details.template.html',
              restrict: 'E',                 
              controller: function ($scope) {
                    $scope.details=$scope.details;  <=== can see the parent details doing this                     
              }
        };
  });

Perhaps this is lame but you can also just point them both at some external object:

var cities = [];

function ParentCtrl() {
    var vm = this;
    vm.cities = cities;
    vm.cities[0] = 'Oakland';
}

function ChildCtrl($scope) {
    var vm = this;
    vm.cities = cities;
}

The benefit here is that edits in ChildCtrl now propogate back to the data in the parent.

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