In Angular 1.x I can do the following to create a link which does basically nothing:

<a href="">My Link</a> 

But the same tag navigates to the app base in Angular 2. What is the equivalent of that in Angular 2?

Edit: It looks like a bug in the Angular 2 Router and now there is an open issue on github about that.

I am looking for an out of the box solution or a confirmation that there won't be any.

9

17 Answers

If you have Angular 5 or above, just change

<a href="" (click)="passTheSalt()">Click me</a> 

into

<a [routerLink]="" (click)="passTheSalt()">Click me</a> 

A link will be displayed with a hand icon when hovering over it and clicking it won't trigger any route.

Note: If you want to keep the query parameters, you should set queryParamsHandling option to preserve:

<a [routerLink]="" queryParamsHandling="preserve" (click)="passTheSalt()">Click me</a> 
12

That will be same, it doesn't have anything related to angular2. It is simple html tag.

Basically a(anchor) tag will be rendered by HTML parser.

Edit

You can disable that href by having javascript:void(0) on it so nothing will happen on it. (But its hack). I know Angular 1 provided this functionality out of the box which isn't seems correct to me now.

<a href="javascript:void(0)" >Test</a> 

Plunkr


Other way around could be using, routerLink directive with passing "" value which will eventually generate blank href=""

<a routerLink="" (click)="passTheSalt()">Click me</a> 
14

There are ways of doing it with angular2, but I strongly disagree this is a bug. I'm not familiarized with angular1, but this seems like a really wrong behavior even though as you claim is useful in some cases, but clearly this should not be the default behavior of any framework.

Disagreements aside you can write a simple directive that grabs all your links and check for href's content and if the length of it it's 0 you execute preventDefault(), here's a little example.

@Directive({ selector : '[href]', host : { '(click)' : 'preventDefault($event)' } }) class MyInhertLink { @Input() href; preventDefault(event) { if(this.href.length == 0) event.preventDefault(); } } 

You can make it to work across your application by adding this directive in PLATFORM_DIRECTIVES

bootstrap(App, [provide(PLATFORM_DIRECTIVES, {useValue: MyInhertLink, multi: true})]); 

Here's a plnkr with an example working.

4

An achor should navigate to something, so I guess the behaviour is correct when it routes. If you need it to toggle something on the page it's more like a button? I use bootstrap so I can use this:

<button type="button" (click)="doSomething()">My Link</button> 
3

I am using this workaround with css:

/*** Angular 2 link without href ***/ a:not([href]){ cursor: pointer; -webkit-user-select: none; -moz-user-select: none; user-select: none } 

html

<a [routerLink]="/">My link</a> 

Hope this helps

1

simeyla solution:

<a href="#" (click)="foo(); false"> <a href="" (click)="false"> 
3

Here are some ways to do it:

  • <a href="" (click)="false">Click Me</a>

  • <a>Click Me</a>

  • <a href="javascript:void(0)">Click Me</a>

0

You have prevent the default browser behaviour. But you don’t need to create a directive to accomplish that.

It’s easy as the following example:

my.component.html

<a href="" (click)="goToPage(pageIndex, $event)">Link</a> 

my.component.ts

goToPage(pageIndex, event) { event.preventDefault(); console.log(pageIndex); } 
1

Here is a simple way

 <div (click)="$event.preventDefault()"> <a href="#"></a> </div> 

capture the bubbling event and shoot it down

1

Updated for Angular 5

import { Directive, HostListener, Input } from '@angular/core'; @Directive({ // tslint:disable-next-line:directive-selector selector : '[href]' }) export class HrefDirective { @Input() public href: string | undefined; @HostListener('click', ['$event']) public onClick(event: Event): void { if (!this.href || this.href === '#' || (this.href && this.href.length === 0)) { event.preventDefault(); } } } 

In my case deleting href attribute solve problem as long there is a click function assign to a.

I have 4 solutions for dummy anchor tag.

 1. <a></a> 2. <a href="javascript:void(0)" ></a> 3. <a href="current_screen_path"></a> 

4.If you are using bootstrap:

<button type="button"(click)="doSomething()">MY Link</button> 

Not sure why people suggest using routerLink="", for me in Angular 11 it triggers navigation. This is what works for me:

<div>No data yet, ready to <a href="#" (click)="create();$event.preventDefault()">create</a>?</div> 

A really simple solution is not to use an A tag - use a span instead:

<span class='link' (click)="doSomething()">Click here</span> span.link { color: blue; cursor: pointer; text-decoration: underline; } 
4

you need to prevent event's default behaviour as follows.

In html

<a href="" (click)="view($event)">view</a> 

In ts file

view(event:Event){ event.preventDefault(); //remaining code goes here.. } 

I wonder why no one is suggesting routerLink and routerLinkActive (Angular 7)

<a [routerLink]="[ '/resources' ]" routerLinkActive="currentUrl!='/resources'"> 

I removed the href and now using this. When using href, it was going to the base url or reloading the same route again.

Updated for Angular2 RC4:

import {HostListener, Directive, Input} from '@angular/core'; @Directive({ selector: '[href]' }) export class PreventDefaultLinkDirective { @Input() href; @HostListener('click', ['$event']) onClick(event) {this.preventDefault(event);} private preventDefault(event) { if (this.href.length === 0 || this.href === '#') { event.preventDefault(); } } } 

Using

bootstrap(App, [provide(PLATFORM_DIRECTIVES, {useValue: PreventDefaultLinkDirective, multi: true})]); 

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