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AngularJS UI-Router multiple pages

As Angular is SPA that's terrific, but what if I need some other page not related to index.html, how is realised by UI-Router states with different ui-views?

For example, I have index.html :

<!DOCTYPE html>
<html data-ng-app="npAdmin">
<head>
...
</head>
<body>
   <header>
      <data-user-profile class="user-profile"></data-user-profile>
  </header>

  <section class="content-wrapper">
      <aside data-main-menu></aside>
      <div class="main-content" data-ui-view></div>
  </section>

  <footer class="row"></footer>
...
</body>
</html>

app.js :

var app = angular.module('npAdmin', ['ui.router']);

app.config(['$httpProvider', '$stateProvider', '$urlRouterProvider', function($httpProvider, $stateProvider, $urlRouterProvider) {

    $stateProvider
    .state('dashboard', {
        url: '/dashboard',
        templateUrl: '/app/dashboard/dashboard.html',
        controller: 'DashboardCtrl'
    })
    .state('crm', {
        url: '/crm',
        templateUrl: '/app/crm/crm.html',
        controller: 'CrmCtrl'
    })
...

Now I need login.html which is totally different from index.html (don't need index's header, footer, sidebar) but config stateProvider only looks to index.html ui-view and changes content to it by states. How to combine login.html?

It seems not that hard, but I don't get it.

As you expected, it is not so difficult, there is a plunker .

The trick is to move the common stuff for all views inside of the specific template eg common.html and create the abstract state. Other words, the index.html will remain clean:

<body>

    <div ui-view=""></div>
</body>

And its previous content (content of the index.html ) would be moved to common.html . The state definition could look like this:

$stateProvider
  .state('common', {
    templateUrl: 'tpl.common.html',
    abstract: true,
  })
  .state('dashboard', {
    url: '/dashboard',
    parent: 'common',
    ...
  })
  .state('crm', { 
    url: '/crm',
    parent: 'common',
    ...
  })
  .state('login', {
    url: '/login',
    templateUrl: 'tpl.login.html',
  });

$urlRouterProvider.otherwise('/crm');

What is interesting (I'd say) is that we introduced abstract state, without url . So the all current logic will remain , just the abstract will play role of a layout template .

Check more here: example

I also had this problem before, refer to THIS if you're interested. In that link, I also handled returnUrl and 401 http status code in case the user is not authorized.

In your case, I suggest you design your application like this:

index.html:

<!DOCTYPE html>
<html data-ng-app="npAdmin">
<head>
...
</head>
<body data-ui-view>

</body>
...
</html>

main.html:

  <header>
      <data-user-profile class="user-profile"></data-user-profile>
  </header>

  <section class="content-wrapper">
      <aside data-main-menu></aside>
      <div class="main-content" data-ui-view></div>
  </section>

  <footer class="row"></footer>

login.html

(include your html for this view)

App.js:

var app = angular.module('npAdmin', ['ui.router']);

app.config(['$httpProvider', '$stateProvider', '$urlRouterProvider', function($httpProvider, $stateProvider, $urlRouterProvider) {

    $stateProvider
    .state('login',{
       url:"/login",
       templateUrl: '/app/login.html',
       controller: 'LoginCtrl'
     })
    .state('main',function(){
       url:"/",
       templateUrl: '/app/main.html',
       controller: 'MainCtrl',
       abstract: true //you could use abstract state or not depending on your design 
    })
    .state('main.dashboard', { //inherit from your main
        url: '/dashboard',
        templateUrl: '/app/dashboard/dashboard.html',
        controller: 'DashboardCtrl'
    })
    .state('main.crm', { //inherit from your main
        url: '/crm',
        templateUrl: '/app/crm/crm.html',
        controller: 'CrmCtrl'
    })

Explanation :

As angular is SPA, your index.html should cover all views of your application. There are multiple ways to ensure that. In this example, the login is also a state in your application that is separated from your main . By utilizing state inheritance in angular router, you could further have child states in your main which are dashboard and crm in this case.

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