
Security News
New CNAPulse Dashboard Tracks CNA Activity and Disclosure Trends
Open source dashboard CNAPulse tracks CVE Numbering Authorities’ publishing activity, highlighting trends and transparency across the CVE ecosystem.
@ioffice/angular-ts
Advanced tools
An approach to using ES6 classes in Angular JS 1.x with Typescript
This library provides ngRegister, a modified version of Michael Browmley's register.js.
angular-ts allows us to declare classes and register them as angular components. Here is a summary
import { ngRegister } from 'angular-ts';
class MyAngularComponent {
constructor(dependency1, dependency2) {
this.dependency1 = dependency1;
this.dependency2 = dependency2;
// stuff happens here
}
someMethods() {
this.dependency1.doThatThing();
this.dependency2.doThatOtherThing();
// more stuff here
}
}
MyAngularComponent.$inject = ['dependency1', 'dependency2'];
ngRegister('app')
.controller('MyController', MyAngularComponent)
.service('myService', MyAngularComponent1)
.provider('myOtherService', MyAngularComponent2)
.factory('myFactory', MyAngularComponent3)
.directive('myDirective', MyAngularComponent4);
or if you prefer to use the dependencies without declaring them you may use the inject function.
import { ngRegister, inject } from 'angular-ts';
class MyAngularComponent {
constructor(...args) {
inject(this, args);
// stuff happens here
}
someMethods() {
this.dependency1.doThatThing();
this.dependency2.doThatOtherThing();
// more stuff here
}
}
inject(MyAngularComponent, ['dependency1', 'dependency2']);
ngRegister('app')
.controller('MyController', MyAngularComponent)
.service('myService', MyAngularComponent1)
.provider('myOtherService', MyAngularComponent2)
.factory('myFactory', MyAngularComponent3)
.directive('myDirective', MyAngularComponent4);
If you are using the experimentalDecorators option in the typescript compiler you may wish to
use the Inject decorator. This allows us to write the previous example as
import { ngRegister, inject } from 'angular-ts';
@Inject(['dependency1', 'dependency2'])
class MyAngularComponent {
constructor(...args) {
inject(this, args);
// stuff happens here
}
someMethods() {
this.dependency1.doThatThing();
// more stuff here
}
}
ngRegister('app')
.controller('MyController', MyAngularComponent)
.service('myService', MyAngularComponent1)
.provider('myOtherService', MyAngularComponent2)
.factory('myFactory', MyAngularComponent3)
.directive('myDirective', MyAngularComponent4);
The angular-1.x directives usually have a lot of options that you can provide. At some point it can get annoying writing something like
import { Inject } from 'angular-ts';
@Inject(['a', 'b'])
class MyDirective {
// Directive options
template: string;
requires: string[];
// ... other directive options
// Injected Dependencies
a: any;
b: any;
constructor(...args: any[]) {
inject(this, args);
this.template = 'template goes here';
this.requires = ['other directives'];
// ...
// and so on ...
}
}
Instead, we may extend from Directive and skip declaring the directive options.
import { Directive, Inject } from 'angular-ts';
@Inject(['a', 'b'])
class MyDirective extends Directive {
// Injected Dependencies
a: any;
b: any;
constructor(...args: any[]) {
super(args);
this.template = 'template goes here';
this.requires = ['other directives'];
// ...
// and so on ...
}
}
This tells the typescript compiler that the class already declares template, requires and
all the other options that a directive provides. Note that all a Directive does is call inject
during initialization as it has been previously done, so do not forget to call the super
constructor with args.
For other examples see example/js/ex-directive.js. One thing to mention here is that
compile, link, preLink and postLink are optional methods. Please note however that if
postLink and link are both declared then only the postLink method will be called. These two
methods should be one and the same so only declare one.
Angular 1.5 introduces components. These were made to make migration to Angular 2 a bit
easier. To migrate we can write components as follows:
import {
Inject,
inject,
NgComponent,
NgOnInit,
NgPostLink,
} from 'angular-ts';
@NgComponent({
selector: 'ex-component',
template: '<div>This is the template</div>',
})
@Inject([
'$element',
])
class ExComponent implements NgOnInit, NgPostLink {
$element: JQuery;
constructor(...args: any[]) {
inject(this, args);
}
$onInit(): void {
this.$element.css('color', 'red');
}
$postLink(): void {
console.log('This is the postLink hook, analogous to the ngAfterViewInit and ngAfterContentInit hooks in Angular 2');
}
}
export {
ExComponent,
};
To register the component we don't have to provide the selector name since this is already defined
in the NgComponent decorator.
import { ExComponent } from 'ExComponent'
ngRegister('app')
.component(ExComponent);
See https://docs.angularjs.org/guide/component for more information on components and https://docs.angularjs.org/api/ng/service/$compile#life-cycle-hooks for an in depth explanation on the life cycle hooks.
If you need to make a component that is a Directive and extends from some other class you may
use the mix function provided by this library. For instance:
import { Directive, Inject, mix } from 'angular-ts';
class OtherClass {
constructor(a, b, c) {
this.a = a;
this.b = b;
this.c = c;
}
getA() {
return this.a;
}
}
@Inject([
'dep1',
'dep2',
// and so on ...
])
class SomeController extends mix(Directive, OtherClass) {
constructor(...args) {
super([Directive, args], [OtherClass, 1, 2, 3]);
}
doSomething() {
console.log('Calling OtherClass method: ', this.getA());
console.log('Using dependencies: ', this.dep1.somemethod);
}
}
NOTE: Do not use instanceof when using mix. Instead use the isinstance function provided by
the library.
inject(clazz: any, injectables: (string | any)[]): voidCan be used after a class declaration to inject its dependencies as well as inside the constructor to attach the dependencies to an instance of the class.
import { inject } from 'angular-ts';
class A {
constructor(...args: any[]) {
inject(this, args);
}
}
inject(A, ['a', 'b']);
Note that when using after the declaration we must provide the class object and not an instance as we have done in the constructor.
Inject(args: string[]): FunctionA decorator to replace using inject after the class declaration. This allows us to see the
dependencies that an angular component uses right in the class declaration.
import { Inject, inject } from 'angular-ts';
@Inject(['a', 'b'])
class A {
constructor(...args: any[]) {
inject(this, args);
}
}
class DirectiveUtility class which provides the following interface:
interface Directive {
controller?: any;
controllerAs?: string;
bindToController?: boolean | Object;
multiElement?: boolean;
name?: string;
priority?: number;
replace?: boolean;
require?: string | string[] | {
[controller: string]: string;
};
restrict?: string;
scope?: boolean | Object;
template?: string | Function;
templateNamespace?: string;
templateUrl?: string | Function;
terminal?: boolean;
transclude?: boolean | string | {
[slot: string]: string;
};
compile?(templateElement: ng.IAugmentedJQuery, templateAttributes: ng.IAttributes, transclude?: ng.ITranscludeFunction): void;
link?(scope: ng.IScope, instanceElement: ng.IAugmentedJQuery, instanceAttributes: ng.IAttributes, controller: any, transclude: ng.ITranscludeFunction): void;
preLink?(scope: ng.IScope, instanceElement: ng.IAugmentedJQuery, instanceAttributes: ng.IAttributes, controller: any, transclude: ng.ITranscludeFunction): void;
postLink?(scope: ng.IScope, instanceElement: ng.IAugmentedJQuery, instanceAttributes: ng.IAttributes, controller: any, transclude: ng.ITranscludeFunction): void;
}
Any angular component extending from Directive will need to call super with the constructors
arguments.
import { Directive, Inject } from 'angular-ts';
@Inject(['a', 'b'])
class A extends Directive {
constructor(...args: any[]) {
super(args);
}
}
ngRegister(appName: string, dependencies?: string[]): NgRegisterProvides a wrapper for angular.module, we can create a brand new angular module by providing the
module dependencies or get the angular module by omitting them. This will return an instance of
NgRegister which provides all the methods an angular module has: controller, directive,
service, etc. To obtain the non-wrapped angular module use the method module.
import { ngRegister } from 'angular-ts';
const app = ngRegister('mymodule', [])
.controller('ctrl', Ctr)
.directive('dir', Dir)
// ...
.module();
mix(...mixins: any[]): typeof IMixinAllows us to create a custom class which combines all the methods of the specified mixins.
class A {
a: number;
constructor(a: number) {
this.a = a;
}
printA() { console.log(this.a); }
}
class B {
b: number;
constructor(b: number) {
this.b = b;
}
printB() { console.log(this.b); }
}
class C extends mix(A, B) {
c: number;
constructor(a: number, b: number, c: number) {
super([A, a], [B, b]);
this.c = c;
}
printC() { console.log('c'); }
}
const obj: C = new C(1, 2, 3);
obj.printA();
obj.printB();
obj.printC();
isinstance(object: any, classinfo: any): booleanUsed to check if an object is an instance of a given class. We may provide an array in the second argument if we want to check if an object is an instance of any of classes in the array.
loadNgModule(callback: Function): any[],Utility function to help lazy load angular modules. To use it first require the module with
webpacks bundle loader:
const lazyBundleCallback = require('bundle?lazy!./realative/path/to/angular/module');
Then on the router load it on a resolve, for instance:
.state('somestate', {
url: 'someurl/',
views: {...},
resolve: {
lazyLoadModule: loadNgModule(lazyBundleCallback),
}
});
You may call lazyLoadModule anything you want, this is just a function that will resolve.
Note: You will need to register ocLazyLoad with the app in order for this to work.
[1.1.1] - June 26, 2018
FAQs
An approach to using ES6 classes in Angular JS 1.x with Typescript
The npm package @ioffice/angular-ts receives a total of 97 weekly downloads. As such, @ioffice/angular-ts popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that @ioffice/angular-ts demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 2 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.

Security News
Open source dashboard CNAPulse tracks CVE Numbering Authorities’ publishing activity, highlighting trends and transparency across the CVE ecosystem.

Product
Detect malware, unsafe data flows, and license issues in GitHub Actions with Socket’s new workflow scanning support.

Product
Add real-time Socket webhook events to your workflows to automatically receive pull request scan results and security alerts in real time.