I'm trying to implement a slideDown/slideUp animation with AngularJS. I can't use CSS3's transition (unfortunately) since the height is set to auto (and I don't want to use the max-height workaround), so I'm trying to use jQuery's slideToggle method.
Given the following markup:
<ul>
    <li ng-repeat="entry in data">
        <span>{{entry.title}}</span>
        <a ng-click="clicked($event)" href>more?</a>
        <p>{{entry.description}}</p>
    </li>
</ul>
I implemented the following method in my controller:
$scope.clicked = function($event) {
    var a = jQuery($event.target);
    var p = a.next();
    p.slideToggle();
};
Even if it seems to work as expected, I understood that modifying DOM shall be done exclusively within directives.
After having read AngularJS' documentation (which I find a bit light IMHO), directives are still a bit vague to me, so could anyone tell me whether the following directive respects AngularJS's best pratices or not?
.directive('testDirective', [
function() {
    return {
        restrict: 'A',
        scope: {
            entry: '=testDirective'
        },
        template: '<span>{{entry.title}}</span> ' +
                  '<a ng-click="clicked($event)" href>more?</a>' +
                  '<p>{{entry.description}}</p>',
        link: function(scope, element) {
            var p = jQuery(element.find('p'));
            scope.clicked = function($event) {
                p.slideToggle();
            };
        }
    };
}])
Could it be improved? Am I allowed to use jQuery within a directive? Does it respect the separation of concerns?
 
     
     
     
    