125
votes

I can't seem to fix this error. I have a search bar and an ngFor. I am trying to filter the array using a custom pipe like this:

import { Pipe, PipeTransform } from '@angular/core';

import { User } from '../user/user';

@Pipe({
  name: 'usersPipe',
  pure: false
})
export class UsersPipe implements PipeTransform {
  transform(users: User [], searchTerm: string) {
    return users.filter(user => user.name.indexOf(searchTerm) !== -1);
  }
}

Usage:

<input [(ngModel)]="searchTerm" type="text" placeholder="Search users">

<div *ngFor="let user of (users | usersPipe:searchTerm)">
...
</div>

Error:

zone.js:478 Unhandled Promise rejection: Template parse errors:
The pipe 'usersPipe' could not be found ("
<div class="row">
    <div  
    [ERROR ->]*ngFor="let user of (user | usersPipe:searchTerm)">

Angular versions:

"@angular/common": "2.0.0-rc.5",
"@angular/compiler": "2.0.0-rc.5",
"@angular/core": "2.0.0-rc.5",
"@angular/platform-browser": "2.0.0-rc.5",
"@angular/platform-browser-dynamic": "2.0.0-rc.5",
"@angular/router": "3.0.0-rc.1",
"@angular/forms": "0.3.0",
"@angular/http": "2.0.0-rc.5",
"es6-shim": "^0.35.0",
"reflect-metadata": "0.1.3",
"rxjs": "5.0.0-beta.6",
"systemjs": "0.19.26",
"bootstrap": "^3.3.6",
"zone.js": "^0.6.12"
10
Did you include it in the Component's Pipes ?Harry Ninh
I just realized that was the reason. How come the angular example for custom pipe never does this: angular.io/resources/live-examples/pipes/ts/plnkr.htmlSumama Waheed
They defined it as global pipe. You can do the same to your custom pipe if you use it in many places and don't want to define in every single annotation.Harry Ninh
@SumamaWaheed I am pretty sure that it was there at some point in the docs, but you are correct the docs now don't mention/show it.Michelangelo

10 Answers

165
votes

Make sure you are not facing a "cross module" problem

If the component which is using the pipe, doesn't belong to the module which has declared the pipe component "globally" then the pipe is not found and you get this error message.

In my case I've declared the pipe in a separate module and imported this pipe module in any other module having components using the pipe.

I have declared a that the component in which you are using the pipe is

the Pipe Module

 import { NgModule }      from '@angular/core';
 import { myDateFormat }          from '../directives/myDateFormat';

 @NgModule({
     imports:        [],
     declarations:   [myDateFormat],
     exports:        [myDateFormat],
 })

 export class PipeModule {

   static forRoot() {
      return {
          ngModule: PipeModule,
          providers: [],
      };
   }
 } 

Usage in another module (e.g. app.module)

  // Import APPLICATION MODULES
  ...
  import { PipeModule }    from './tools/PipeModule';

  @NgModule({
     imports: [
    ...
    , PipeModule.forRoot()
    ....
  ],
65
votes

You need to include your pipe in module declaration:

declarations: [ UsersPipe ],
providers: [UsersPipe]
20
votes

For Ionic you can face multiple issues as @Karl mentioned. The solution which works flawlessly for ionic lazy loaded pages is:

  1. Create pipes directory with following files: pipes.ts and pipes.module.ts

// pipes.ts content (it can have multiple pipes inside, just remember to

use @Pipe function before each class)
import { PipeTransform, Pipe } from "@angular/core";
@Pipe({ name: "toArray" })
export class toArrayPipe implements PipeTransform {
  transform(value, args: string[]): any {
    if (!value) return value;
    let keys = [];
    for (let key in value) {
      keys.push({ key: key, value: value[key] });
    }
    return keys;
  }
}

// pipes.module.ts content

import { NgModule } from "@angular/core";
import { IonicModule } from "ionic-angular";
import { toArrayPipe } from "./pipes";

@NgModule({
  declarations: [toArrayPipe],
  imports: [IonicModule],
  exports: [toArrayPipe]
})
export class PipesModule {}
  1. Include PipesModule into app.module and @NgModule imports section

    import { PipesModule } from "../pipes/pipes.module"; @NgModule({ imports: [ PipesModule ] });

  2. Include PipesModule in each of your .module.ts where you want to use custom pipes. Don't forget to add it into imports section. // Example. file: pages/my-custom-page/my-custom-page.module.ts

    import { PipesModule } from "../../pipes/pipes.module"; @NgModule({ imports: [ PipesModule ] })

  3. Thats it. Now you can use your custom pipe in your template. Ex.

<div *ngFor="let prop of myObject | toArray">{{ prop.key }}</div>

13
votes

I found the "cross module" answer above very helpful to my situation, but would want to expand on that, as there is another wrinkle to consider. If you have a submodule, it also can't see the pipes in the parent module in my testing. For that reason also, you may need to put pipes into there own separate module.

Here's a summary of the steps I took to address pipes not being visible in the submodule:

  1. Take pipes out of (parent) SharedModule and put into PipeModule
  2. In SharedModule, import PipeModule and export (for other parts of app dependent on SharedModule to automatically gain access to PipeModule)
  3. For Sub-SharedModule, import PipeModule, so it can gain access to PipeModule, without having to re-import SharedModule which would create a circular dependency issue, among other problems.

Another footnote to the above "cross module" answer: when I created the PipeModule I removed the forRoot static method and imported PipeModule without that in my shared module. My basic understanding is that forRoot is useful for scenarios like singletons, which don't apply to filters necessarily.

3
votes

Suggesting an alternative answer here:

Making a separate module for the Pipe is not required, but is definitely an alternative. Check the official docs footnote: https://angular.io/guide/pipes#custom-pipes

You use your custom pipe the same way you use built-in pipes.
You must include your pipe in the declarations array of the AppModule . If you choose to inject your pipe into a class, you must provide it in the providers array of your NgModule.

All you have to do is add your pipe to the declarations array, and the providers array in the module where you want to use the Pipe.

declarations: [
...
CustomPipe,
...
],
providers: [
...
CustomPipe,
...
]
1
votes

Custom Pipes: When a custom pipe is created, It must be registered in Module and Component that is being used.

export class SummaryPipe implements PipeTransform{
//Implementing transform

  transform(value: string, limit?: number): any { 
    if (!value) {
        return null;
    }
    else {
        let actualLimit=limit>0?limit:50
       return value.substr(0,actualLimit)+'...'
    } 
  }
}

Add Pipe Decorator

 @Pipe({
        name:'summary'
    })

and refer

import { SummaryPipe } from '../summary.pipe';` //**In Component and Module**
<div>
    **{{text | summary}}**  //Name should same as it is mentioned in the decorator.
</div>

//summary is the name declared in Pipe decorator

0
votes

Note : Only if you are not using angular modules

For some reason this is not in the docs but I had to import the custom pipe in the component

import {UsersPipe} from './users-filter.pipe'

@Component({
    ...
    pipes:      [UsersPipe]
})
0
votes

If you see this error when running tests, make sure you have imported the module the pipe belongs to, e.g.:

    beforeEach(async(() => {
        TestBed.configureTestingModule({
            imports: [CustomPipeModule],
            declarations: [...],
            providers: [...],
            ...
        }).compileComponents();
    }));
-1
votes

I have created a module for pipes in the same directory where my pipes are present

import { NgModule } from '@angular/core';
///import pipe...
import { Base64ToImage, TruncateString} from './'  

   @NgModule({
        imports: [],
        declarations: [Base64ToImage, TruncateString],
        exports: [Base64ToImage, TruncateString]
    })

    export class SharedPipeModule { }   

Now import that module in app.module:

import {SharedPipeModule} from './pipe/shared.pipe.module'
 @NgModule({
     imports: [
    ...
    , PipeModule.forRoot()
    ....
  ],

Now it can be used by importing the same in the nested module

-1
votes
import { Component, Pipe, PipeTransform } from '@angular/core';

@Pipe({
  name: 'timePipe'
})
export class TimeValuePipe implements PipeTransform {

  transform(value: any, args?: any): any {
   var hoursMinutes = value.split(/[.:]/);
  var hours = parseInt(hoursMinutes[0], 10);
  var minutes = hoursMinutes[1] ? parseInt(hoursMinutes[1], 10) : 0;
  console.log('hours ', hours);
  console.log('minutes ', minutes/60);
  return (hours + minutes / 60).toFixed(2);
  }
}
@Component({
  selector: 'my-app',
  templateUrl: './app.component.html',
  styleUrls: ['./app.component.css']
})
export class AppComponent {
  name = 'Angular';
  order = [
    {
      "order_status": "Still at Shop",
      "order_id": "0:02"
    },
    {
      "order_status": "On the way",
      "order_id": "02:29"
    },
    {
      "order_status": "Delivered",
      "order_id": "16:14"
    },
     {
      "order_status": "Delivered",
      "order_id": "07:30"
    }
  ]
}

Invoke this module in App.Module.ts file.