Angular directive name: only lower case letters allowed?
Solution 1:
AngularJS attempts to make everyone happy!
Some people prefer to use data attributes, like data-abc-abc
, I assume to keep validators happy. Other people prefer to use namespaces like abc:abc
, and others prefer to use the actual directive name abcAbc
. Or even all caps ABC_ABC
. Or extension attributes like x-abc-abc
.
AngularJS normalises the name used in HTML to attempt to cover all of these cases. data-
and x-
are stripped, the remainder camelcased with :
, -
and _
as word boundaries. This makes abcAbc
from the cases mentioned above, which is used to look up the directive declared in JavaScript.
This is all called attribute normalisation (US: attribute normalization) and can be found in the AngularJS documentation and source code.
Solution 2:
You should use dash-separated names inside the html and camelCase for the corresponding name in the directive.
As you can read on the doc: Angular uses name-with-dashes for attribute names and camelCase for the corresponding directive name)
Here: http://docs.angularjs.org/tutorial/step_00