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@cerebral/angularjs
Advanced tools
Angularjs view for Cerebral.
npm install @cerebral/angularjs angular
import angular from 'angular'
import { addModule, connect } from '@cerebral/angularjs'
import App from 'cerebral'
addModule(angular)
const mainModule = Module({
state: {
foo: 'bar'
},
sequences: {
onClick: []
},
services: ['MyAngularService'] // main module only. Added as providers with same name
})
const app = App(mainModule)
angular.module('app', ['cerebral'])
.config(function (cerebralProvider) {
cerebralProvider.configure(app)
})
...
import angular from 'angular'
import { addModule, connect } from '@cerebral/angularjs'
import { state, sequences } from 'cerebral'
angular.module('app', ['cerebral'])
.config(...)
.component('myComponent', {
template: '<div ng-click="$ctrl.click()">{{$ctrl.foo}}</div>',
controller: connect({
foo: state`foo`,
click: sequences`onClick`
}, 'MyComponent', ['cerebral', function MyController (cerebral) {
// In some cases you might need access to the cerebral app.
// You can inject the cerebral angular service and
// access it's app property anywhere in your app
cerebral.app.getSequence('mySignal')()
// Optionally add custom behaviour to app
}])
})
Since angular doesn't expose the component name,
you will need to provide one to connect
for the
component to be given a name in cerebral.
You can call connect in the following ways:
connect(dependencies)
connect(dependencies, name)
connect(dependencies, controller)
connect(dependencies, name, controller)
FAQs
Angularjs view for Cerebral
We found that @cerebral/angularjs demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 6 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
Did you know?
Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.
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