Ng-next is a simple and elegant way to use Angular 1.x with ES6 / ES7. It provides an expressive syntax to maintain the simplicity and readability of your code.
- Decorators for angular & ui-router
- Async / Await integration to make it compatible with angular's $digest cycle
- Monkey patch for
$scope.$watchCollection
to work with ES6 iterables (Set / Map / Symbol.iterator)
- Angular 1.x
Note: In order to use Angular UI-Router specific decorators, you need to install Angular UI-Router first.
Ng-next is available on npm
npm install --save ng-next
Make sure you define your angular module before
Then simply import the package like this:
import "ng-next"
Ng-next relies on ng-app
to fetch your angular module.
Alternatively you can define it on the config
object.
For the full list of ECMAScript 2015 features, please refer to the Babel Documentation.
If you want to use decorators please install Babel support for decoratos
Making asynchronous http requests was until now a bit of a hassle. Ng-next provides therefore an elegant and convenient way to achieve the same result.
Ng-next makes use of the ES6 async / await
functions.
async getUsers() {
this.user = await this.UserService.index();
}
You don't have to manually call the $rootScope.$digest()
after every asynchronous http requests you make.
This is achieved by injecting proxies into the default Promise
class, which is used by async / await
.
The proxies get injected into Promise
the first time you call import "ng-next"
. Magic!
Be aware of the amount of async / await
or Promise.then
statements you use in your project. High usage can cause slight performance issues.
In this case you can limit all $rootScope.$digest()
calls by setting a minimum duration that has to pass before $rootScope
gets $digested again.
import {config} from "ng-next"
config.DEBOUNCE_DIGEST_MILLIS = [millis] //Debounce for [millis]
config.DEBOUNCE_DIGEST_MILLIS = false //Disable debounce
Ng-next monkey patches $scope.$watchCollection
of every scope to make it compatible with any iterable object.
With this technique you can use ng-repeat
and similiar directives with a Set
or any object that has a [Symbol.iterator]
method.
import {Controller} from "ng-next"
@Controller
export class ListController
{
list = new Set(["1", "2", "3", "4", "5"])
[Symbol.iterator]()
{
return list[Symbol.iterator]();
}
}
//Html
<div ng-controller="ListController as listCtrl">
<h1>Iterate over Set</h1>
<h2 ng-repeat="item in listCtrl.list">{{ item }}</h2>
<h1>Iterate over controller</h1>
<h2 ng-repeat="item in listCtrl">{{ item }}</h2>
</div>
Angular configuration decorators
@Controller
@Service
@Component
@Directive
@Filter
@Config / @Run
Utility decorators
@Inject
@Init
@Destroy
@On
@Watch
@WatchCollection
@Debounce
Other decorators
@State
@Alias
@View
@Bind
import {Controller} from "ng-next"
@Controller
export class FooController
{
@Inject $http;
}
@Controller("BarController") //Minify safe
export class BarController
{
@Inject $rootScope;
}
import {Service} from "ng-next"
@Service
export class FooService { }
@Service("BarService") //Minify safe
export class BarService { }
@Component
is placed directly on top of its controller!
import {Component, View, Alias, Bind} from "ng-next"
/**
* Component with decorators
*/
@Component("bar") //<bar></bar> Same as @Component({ name : "bar" })
@Alias("barCtrl")
@View("<h1>{{ barCtrl.foo }}</h1>")
export class BarComponent
{
@Bind("=") foo;
constructor() {
console.log(this.foo);
}
}
/**
* More old-scool component.
* The object given into the decorator is used as directive configuration
* You may use every property a directive can have
*/
@Component({
name : "foo",
template : "<h1>{{ fooCtrl.bar }}</h1>"
bind : {
bar : "="
},
as : "fooCtrl"
}) //<foo> </foo>
export class FooComponent
{
constructor() {
console.log(this.bar);
}
}
import {Directive} from "ng-next"
@Directive("foo") //<div foo> </div>
export class FooDirective
{
restrict = "AE"
scope = {
bar : "="
}
link(...){}
}
import {Filter} from "ng-next"
export class Filters
{
/**
* @ngInject
*/
@Filter //uses method name as filter name
upper($http){
return (string) => string.toUpperCase()
}
/**
* @ngInject
*/
@Filter("lower")
lower($rootScope){
return (string) => string.toLowerCase()
}
}
}
import {Config, Run} from "ng-next"
export class Configuration
{
/**
* @ngInject
*/
@Run
runSomething($rootScope){
return (string) => string.toUpperCase()
}
/**
* @ngInject
*/
@Config
configureSomething($httpProvider){
//Config method
}
}
Those decorators should only be used on controllers and services. For services ng-next will use the $rootScope as the scope for @On, @Watch etc.
import {Inject, Controller, Init, Destroy, On, Watch, WatchCollection, Debounce}
@Controller
export class MainController
{
/**
* Directly inject the angular http service
*/
@Inject $http;
/**
* Directly inject the controller $scope
*/
@Inject $scope;
/**
* Inject the $rootScope under an alias
*/
@Inject("$rootScope") baseScope;
/**
* A random property
*/
property = "Hello World";
/**
* A random array
*/
array = ["1", "hello", "red"];
@Init //You cannot use await in constructors, so @Init is perfect for that
async init()
{
let response = await this.$http.get("....");
//Do init stuff
}
@Destroy
cleanUp()
{
//Cleanup when the controller / its scope gets destroyed
}
/**
* With @On you can listen to any event you can with $scope.$on
*/
@On("$stateChangeSuccess")
stateChanged(event)
{
console.log("state changed", event)
}
/**
* With @Watch you can listen to any property as you would with $scope.$watch, but
* its evaluateed on the controller instead of the scope
*/
@Watch("property")
stateChanged(newValue, oldValue)
{
console.log(`Property changed from ${oldValue} to ${newValue}`)
}
/**
* With @WatchCollection you can listen to any property as you would with $scope.$watchCollection, but
* its evaluateed on the controller instead of the scope
*/
@WatchCollection("array")
stateChanged(newValue, oldValue)
{
console.log(`Array changed from ${oldValue} to ${newValue}`)
}
/**
* @Debounce will debounce the method for the given amount of millis
*/
@Debounce(100)
oftenCalledMethod()
{
//I get executed after i wasn't called for 100 milliseconds
}
}
The @State
decorator defines a state for the common ui-router
plugin and sets the class
its on top of as controller.
You can combine it with @View / @Alias
or configure the state as you're used to.
import {State, Alias, View}
@State({
name : "user",
url : "/user",
default : true // Default state
})
@View("/views/user.html")
@Alias("userCtrl")
export class UserController
{
//State controller
}
Sets the controllerAs property of an @Component
or @State
import {Alias, State, Component}
@State(...)
@Alias("userCtrl")
export class UserController{ ... }
@Component("user")
@Alias("userCtrl")
export class UserComponent{ ... }
Sets the template / templateUrl property of an @Component
or @State
, if the string contains a "<" it will be
treated as the HTML template, otherwise it will be considered as the path to the HTML template.
import {View, State, Component}
@State(...)
@View("/views/user.html")
export class UserController{ ... }
@Component("user")
@View("<h1>Hello</h1>")
export class UserComponent{ ... }
Defines a property / attribute which should be bound with the related component.
In this case the user
component.
import {Bind, Component, View}
@Component("user")
@View("<h1>{{ $ctrl.name }}</h1>")
export class UserComponent
{
/**
* If the html is <user name="Dude"></user> then
* this property is "Dude"
*/
@Bind("@") name;
}
This little library is pretty new and under active development. Please report bugs and improvements :)
The ng-next library is open-sourced software licensed under the MIT License.