Don’t use this pattern – This will end up causing more errors than it solves. Even though you think it fixed something, it didn’t.
You can check if a $digest
is already in progress by checking $scope.$$phase
.
if(!$scope.$$phase) { //$digest or $apply }
$scope.$$phase
will return "$digest"
or "$apply"
if a $digest
or $apply
is in progress. I believe the difference between these states is that $digest
will process the watches of the current scope and its children, and $apply
will process the watchers of all scopes.
To @dnc253’s point, if you find yourself calling $digest
or $apply
frequently, you may be doing it wrong. I generally find I need to digest when I need to update the scope’s state as a result of a DOM event firing outside the reach of Angular. For example, when a twitter bootstrap modal becomes hidden. Sometimes the DOM event fires when a $digest
is in progress, sometimes not. That’s why I use this check.
I would love to know a better way if anyone knows one.
From comments: by @anddoutoi
- Don’t do
if (!$scope.$$phase) $scope.$apply()
, it means your$scope.$apply()
isn’t high enough in the call stack.