156

How can I detect clicks outside a component in Angular?

Mark Amery
  • 127,031
  • 74
  • 384
  • 431
AMagyar
  • 4,580
  • 3
  • 12
  • 16

11 Answers11

266
import { Component, ElementRef, HostListener, Input } from '@angular/core';

@Component({
  selector: 'selector',
  template: `
    <div>
      {{text}}
    </div>
  `
})
export class AnotherComponent {
  public text: String;

  @HostListener('document:click', ['$event'])
  clickout(event) {
    if(this.eRef.nativeElement.contains(event.target)) {
      this.text = "clicked inside";
    } else {
      this.text = "clicked outside";
    }
  }

  constructor(private eRef: ElementRef) {
    this.text = 'no clicks yet';
  }
}

A working example - click here

Shashank Vivek
  • 15,676
  • 8
  • 57
  • 96
AMagyar
  • 4,580
  • 3
  • 12
  • 16
  • 20
    This doesn't work when there is an element controlled by an ngIf inside the trigger element, since the ngIf removing the element from the DOM happens before the click event: http://plnkr.co/edit/spctsLxkFCxNqLtfzE5q?p=preview – J. Frankenstein Oct 09 '17 at 23:23
  • does it work on a component that created dynamiclly via : const factory = this.resolver.resolveComponentFactory(MyComponent); const elem = this.vcr.createComponent(factory); – Avi Moraly Feb 12 '18 at 17:19
  • 1
    A nice article on this topic: https://christianliebel.com/2016/05/angular-2-a-simple-click-outside-directive/ – Miguel Lara Jan 24 '19 at 12:32
76

An alternative to AMagyar's answer. This version works when you click on element that gets removed from the DOM with an ngIf.

http://plnkr.co/edit/4mrn4GjM95uvSbQtxrAS?p=preview

  private wasInside = false;
  
  @HostListener('click')
  clickInside() {
    this.text = "clicked inside";
    this.wasInside = true;
  }
  
  @HostListener('document:click')
  clickout() {
    if (!this.wasInside) {
      this.text = "clicked outside";
    }
    this.wasInside = false;
  }
J. Frankenstein
  • 1,555
  • 13
  • 24
56

Binding to document click through @Hostlistener is costly. It can and will have a visible performance impact if you overuse(for example, when building a custom dropdown component and you have multiple instances created in a form).

I suggest adding a @Hostlistener() to the document click event only once inside your main app component. The event should push the value of the clicked target element inside a public subject stored in a global utility service.

@Component({
  selector: 'app-root',
  template: '<router-outlet></router-outlet>'
})
export class AppComponent {

  constructor(private utilitiesService: UtilitiesService) {}

  @HostListener('document:click', ['$event'])
  documentClick(event: any): void {
    this.utilitiesService.documentClickedTarget.next(event.target)
  }
}

@Injectable({ providedIn: 'root' })
export class UtilitiesService {
   documentClickedTarget: Subject<HTMLElement> = new Subject<HTMLElement>()
}

Whoever is interested for the clicked target element should subscribe to the public subject of our utilities service and unsubscribe when the component is destroyed.

export class AnotherComponent implements OnInit {

  @ViewChild('somePopup', { read: ElementRef, static: false }) somePopup: ElementRef

  constructor(private utilitiesService: UtilitiesService) { }

  ngOnInit() {
      this.utilitiesService.documentClickedTarget
           .subscribe(target => this.documentClickListener(target))
  }

  documentClickListener(target: any): void {
     if (this.somePopup.nativeElement.contains(target))
        // Clicked inside  
     else
        // Clicked outside
  }
ginalx
  • 1,449
  • 1
  • 14
  • 14
  • 7
    I think that this one should become the accepted answer as it allows for many optimizations: like in [this example](https://stackoverflow.com/a/60014879/702951) – edoardo849 Feb 01 '20 at 07:26
  • 1
    this is the prettiest solution i got on the internet – Anup Bangale May 26 '20 at 13:58
  • 3
    @lampshade Correct. I talked about this. Read the answer again. I leave the unsubscribe implementation to your style (takeUntil(), Subscription.add()). Don't forget to unsubscribe! – ginalx Jun 12 '20 at 08:15
  • @ginalx I implemented your solution, it works as expected. Though ran into an issue the way I use it. [Here's](https://stackoverflow.com/questions/62563640/angular-custom-clickaway-listener-is-triggered-if-a-child-component-is-removed-u) the question, please take a look – Nilesh Kumar Jun 28 '20 at 14:04
  • Is there a way for the HostListener to only be active when there are subscribers interested in the events? – David Jan 27 '22 at 11:56
10

Improving @J. Frankenstein answear

  
  @HostListener('click')
  clickInside($event) {
    this.text = "clicked inside";
    $event.stopPropagation();
  }
  
  @HostListener('document:click')
  clickOutside() {
      this.text = "clicked outside";
  }
John Libes
  • 305
  • 3
  • 11
  • Niece solution, but `stopPropagation` might affect logic outside of the component: google analytics, closing of another component, etc – Vincente Dec 30 '21 at 14:44
7

Above mentioned answers are correct but what if you are doing a heavy process after losing the focus from the relevant component. For that, I came with a solution with two flags where the focus out event process will only take place when losing the focus from relevant component only.

isFocusInsideComponent = false;
isComponentClicked = false;

@HostListener('click')
clickInside() {
    this.isFocusInsideComponent = true;
    this.isComponentClicked = true;
}

@HostListener('document:click')
clickout() {
    if (!this.isFocusInsideComponent && this.isComponentClicked) {
        // do the heavy process

        this.isComponentClicked = false;
    }
    this.isFocusInsideComponent = false;
}

Hope this will help you. Correct me If have missed anything.

Rishanthakumar
  • 761
  • 8
  • 19
5

ginalx's answer should be set as the default one imo: this method allows for many optimizations.

The problem

Say that we have a list of items and on every item we want to include a menu that needs to be toggled. We include a toggle on a button that listens for a click event on itself (click)="toggle()", but we also want to toggle the menu whenever the user clicks outside of it. If the list of items grows and we attach a @HostListener('document:click') on every menu, then every menu loaded within the item will start listening for the click on the entire document, even when the menu is toggled off. Besides the obvious performance issues, this is unnecessary.

You can, for example, subscribe whenever the popup gets toggled via a click and start listening for "outside clicks" only then.


isActive: boolean = false;

// to prevent memory leaks and improve efficiency, the menu
// gets loaded only when the toggle gets clicked
private _toggleMenuSubject$: BehaviorSubject<boolean>;
private _toggleMenu$: Observable<boolean>;

private _toggleMenuSub: Subscription;
private _clickSub: Subscription = null;


constructor(
 ...
 private _utilitiesService: UtilitiesService,
 private _elementRef: ElementRef,
){
 ...
 this._toggleMenuSubject$ = new BehaviorSubject(false);
 this._toggleMenu$ = this._toggleMenuSubject$.asObservable();

}

ngOnInit() {
 this._toggleMenuSub = this._toggleMenu$.pipe(
      tap(isActive => {
        logger.debug('Label Menu is active', isActive)
        this.isActive = isActive;

        // subscribe to the click event only if the menu is Active
        // otherwise unsubscribe and save memory
        if(isActive === true){
          this._clickSub = this._utilitiesService.documentClickedTarget
           .subscribe(target => this._documentClickListener(target));
        }else if(isActive === false && this._clickSub !== null){
          this._clickSub.unsubscribe();
        }

      }),
      // other observable logic
      ...
      ).subscribe();
}

toggle() {
    this._toggleMenuSubject$.next(!this.isActive);
}

private _documentClickListener(targetElement: HTMLElement): void {
    const clickedInside = this._elementRef.nativeElement.contains(targetElement);
    if (!clickedInside) {
      this._toggleMenuSubject$.next(false);
    }    
 }

ngOnDestroy(){
 this._toggleMenuSub.unsubscribe();
}

And, in *.component.html:


<button (click)="toggle()">Toggle the menu</button>

edoardo849
  • 133
  • 1
  • 2
  • 8
  • 2
    While I agree with the way you think, I'd suggest not stuffing all logic in a `tap` operator. Instead, use `skipWhile(() => !this.isActive), switchMap(() => this._utilitiesService.documentClickedTarget), filter((target) => !this._elementRef.nativeElement.contains(target)), tap(() => this._toggleMenuSubject$.next(false))`. This way you utilize way more of RxJs and skip some subscriptions. – Gizrah Mar 26 '20 at 12:35
  • Maybe you can help me out here - https://stackoverflow.com/questions/69886444/implementing-a-hostlistener-only-when-component-is-called – Tom Rudge Nov 30 '21 at 15:27
1

You can useclickOutside() method from https://www.npmjs.com/package/ng-click-outside package

James Bond
  • 27
  • 2
1

Alternative to MVP, you only need to watch for Event

@HostListener('focusout', ['$event'])
  protected onFocusOut(event: FocusEvent): void {
    console.log(
      'click away from component? :',
      event.currentTarget && event.relatedTarget
    );
  }
0

u can call event function like (focusout) or (blur) then u put your code

<div tabindex=0 (blur)="outsideClick()">raw data </div>
 

 outsideClick() {
  alert('put your condition here');
   }
0

another possible solution using event.stopPropagation()

  1. define a click listener on top most parent component which clears the click-inside variable
  2. define a click listener on the child component which first calls the event.stopPropagation() and then sets the click-inside variable
HoseinGhanbari
  • 840
  • 1
  • 9
  • 21
0

Solution

Get all parents

var paths       = event['path'] as Array<any>;

Checks if any parent is the component

var inComponent = false;    
paths.forEach(path => {
    if (path.tagName != undefined) {
        var tagName = path.tagName.toString().toLowerCase();
        if (tagName == 'app-component')
            inComponent = true;
    }
});

If you have the component as parent then click inside the component

if (inComponent) {
    console.log('clicked inside');
}else{
    console.log('clicked outside');
}

Complete method

@HostListener('document:click', ['$event'])
clickout(event: PointerEvent) {
    
    var paths       = event['path'] as Array<any>;
    
    var inComponent = false;    
    paths.forEach(path => {
        if (path.tagName != undefined) {
            var tagName = path.tagName.toString().toLowerCase();
            if (tagName == 'app-component')
                inComponent = true;
        }
    });
    
    if (inComponent) {
        console.log('clicked inside');
    }else{
        console.log('clicked outside');
    }
    
}
Wictor Chaves
  • 735
  • 1
  • 10
  • 20