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Version: v8 (beta)

Runtime Issues

Blank App

note

I have no errors in my app. Why does it show a blank screen?

There are several different reasons this can happen. If you are unable to find a solution on the Ionic forums, make sure:

  • Polyfills are not included for older browser/versions of android

For projects with @angular/cli@7.3 or above, polyfills will automatically be included. For project created before that, polyfills need to be manually enabled.

In src/polyfills.ts, you must enabled all ES6 polyfills for Android 4.4 support.

Alternatively, a project could be updated to use the latest release of the @angular/cli package & @angular-devkit packages and include the es5BrowserSupport option in the angular.json's build options object:

        "input": "src/global.scss"
}
],
- "scripts": []
+ "scripts": [],
+ "es5BrowserSupport": true
},
"configurations": {
"production": {

This will automatically include the polyfills for older browsers that need them.

Directive Not Working

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Why is my custom component/directive not working?

There are a few things you can check. Make sure:

  • Your selector doesn't have any misspellings.
  • You're using the selector correctly as an attribute, element or class.
  • Your selector has the proper syntax:
    • [attr] if it's an attribute selector
    • element if it's an element selector
    • .class if it's a class selector

Here's an example using an attribute selector:

@Directive({
selector: '[my-dir]' // <-- [my-dir] because it is an attribute
}) // Could be my-dir, [my-dir], .my-dir
class MyDir {
constructor() {
console.log('I'm alive!');
}
}

@Component({
// We add my-dir as an attribute to match the directive's selector
template: `<div my-dir>Hello World</div>`,

// Alternatively, if you were attaching the directive to an element it would be:
// template: `<my-dir>Hello World</my-dir>`
// and if you were attaching by class the template would be:
// template: `<div class="my-dir">Hello World</div>`

directives: [MyDir] // <-- Don't forget me! (only if your ionic-angular version is below RC0)
})
class MyPage { }

Click Delays

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Why is there a delay on my click event?

In general, we recommend only adding (click) events to elements that are normally clickable. This includes <button> and <a> elements. This improves accessibility as a screen reader will be able to tell that the element is clickable.

However, you may need to add a (click) event to an element that is not normally clickable. When you do this you may experience a 300ms delay from the time you click the element to the event firing. To remove this delay, you can add the tappable attribute to your element.

<div tappable (click)="doClick()">I am clickable!</div>

Angular Change Detection

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Why does Angular change detection run very frequently when my components are initializing?

Angular uses a library called zone.js which helps it determine when to run change detection.

As of zone.js 0.8.27, certain APIs for Web Components also cause change detection to run. This can have the undesirable side effect of your app slowing down when a large number of components are initializing.

To prevent this from happening, the zone.js flag that manages this portion of change detection can be disabled. In the src directory of your application, create a file called zone-flags.ts. Place the following code into the file:

(window as any).__Zone_disable_customElements = true;

The zone-flags.ts file then needs to be imported into your application's polyfills.ts file. Be sure to import it before zone.js is imported:

...

import './zone-flags.ts';
import 'zone.js/dist/zone'; // Included with Angular CLI

...

This change will only affect applications that depend on zone.js 0.8.27 or newer. Older versions will not be affected by this change.

note

This flag is automatically included when creating an Ionic app via

the Ionic CLI.

Cordova plugins not working in the browser

At some point in your development you may, try to call Cordova plugin, but get a warning:

[Warning] Native: tried calling StatusBar.styleDefault, but Cordova is not
available. Make sure to include cordova.js or run in a device/simulator
(app.bundle.js, line 83388)

This happens when you try to call a native plugin, but Cordova isn't available. Thankfully, Ionic Native will print out a nice warning, instead of an error.

In other cases where the plugin is not being used through Ionic Native, plugins can print a much more obscure warning.

EXCEPTION: Error: Uncaught (in promise): TypeError: undefined is not an object
(evaluating 'navigator.camera.getPicture')

If this happens, test the plugin on a real device or simulator.

Multiple instances of a provider

If you inject a provider in every component because you want it available to all of them you will end up with multiple instances of the provider. You should inject the provider once in the parent component if you want it to be available to the child components.

let id = 0;
export class MyService {
id: number;

constructor() {
this.id = id++;
}
}

@Component({
selector: 'my-component',
template: 'Hello World',
providers: [MyService], // <-- Creates a new instance of MyService :(
}) // Unnecessary because MyService is in App's providers
class MyComp {
// id is 1, s is a different MyService instance than MyApp
constructor(s: MyService) {
console.log('MyService id is: ' + s.id);
}
}

@Component({
template: '<my-component></my-component>',
providers: [MyService], // MyService only needs to be here
directives: [MyComp],
})
class MyApp {
// id is 0
constructor(s: MyService) {
console.log('MyService id is: ' + s.id);
}
}

Accessing this in a function callback returns undefined

Certain components, such as counterFormatter on ion-input and pinFormatter on ion-range, allow developers to pass callbacks. It's important that you bind the correct this value if you plan to access this from within the context of the callback. You may need to access this when using Angular components or when using class components in React. There are two ways to bind this:

The first way to bind this is to use the bind() method on a function instance. If you want to pass a callback called counterFormatterFn, then you would write counterFormatterFn.bind(this).

The second way to bind this is to use an arrow function when defining the callback. This works because JavaScript does not create a new this binding for arrow functions.

See its MDN page for more information on how this works in JavaScript.