Angular Hint Directives
This hinting module is part of the overall tool AngularHint
that aims to help you spend less time finding silent errors in your code and more time programming. Loading this module will provide warnings specific to AngularJS directives.
See the AngularHintEvents NPM Module.
Usage
Install the AngularHint NPM module
and use ng-hint
or ng-hint-include='directives'
to
enable AngularHintDirectives. Further installation information is available on the
main AngularHint repository.
Features:
Misspelled Directives and Attributes
AngularHintDirectives identifies directives that are undefined, most likely because of spelling errors.
It provides suggestions of similarly spelled directives that are defined. For example, the code below has a simple spelling error that would prevent the list elements from being loaded. AngularHintDirectives warns that it found the nonexistent 'ng-repaet' directive and suggests that 'ng-repeat' might be the intended command.
<div>
<ul>
<li ng-repaet="i in [1,2,3,4]">{{i}}</li>
</ul>
</div>
Missing Required Attributes
AngularHintDirectives identifies whether you include all variables declared through two way binding. In the example below, we have declared the attributes 'breadcrumbs' and 'id' to exsist within the 'haBreadcrumbs' directive.
angular.module('breadcrumbs').
directive('haBreadcrumbs', function() {
return {
restrict: 'E',g
templateUrl: 'components/breadcrumbs/breadcrumbs.html',
scope: {
breadcrumbs: '=',
id = '@'
}
};
});
If you used your directive like in the HTML example below, you would be notified that you are missing the 'id' attribute from your 'haBreadcrumbs' directive.
<breadcrumbs ha-breadcrumbs="['home','profile','about']"> </breadcrumbs>
Following Restrict Property
AngularHintDirectives will also notify you if you use directives reserved for elements or attributes incorrectly. In the code below, we create a directive called 'haBreadcrumbs' that is restricted to elements only. It will have an attribute by the name of 'breadcrumbs'.
angular.module('breadcrumbs').
directive('haBreadcrumbs', function() {
return {
restrict: 'E',
templateUrl: 'components/breadcrumbs/breadcrumbs.html',
scope: {
breadcrumbs: '='
}
};
});
So if in your code you tried to use the example below You would promtly be notified that you have used 'ha-breadcrumbs' as an attribute when its reserved for elements only and vice verse for 'breadcrumbs'.
<breadcrumbs ha-breadcrumbs="['home','profile','about']"> </breadcrumbs>
Using Deprecated Options
AngularHintDirectives will notify you if you are using deprecated options when instantiating your directive. In the example below you will be warned about using the deprecated 'replace' option in your directive.
angular.module('breadcrumbs').
directive('haBreadcrumbs', function() {
return {
restrict: 'E',
templateUrl: 'components/breadcrumbs/breadcrumbs.html',
scope: {breadcrumbs: '='},
replace: true
};
});
Alternatively, deprecated directives will also generate warnings. The ng-bind-html-unsafe
directive
is deprecated and will generate a warning. See the breaking change for more information.
Using Angular Event Directives
AngularHintDirectives will notify you if you are using HTML event attributes such as onclick, onfocus, etc. and prompt you to use their Angular counterparts. Below you would be told to change 'onchange' to 'ng-change'.
<div id='search' onchange='update()'></div>
Using ngRepeat Incorrectly
ngRepeat has a lot of options (e.g. track by
and filter:
) and getting them in the right order can be hard. AngularHintDirective helps with this by suggesting the correct ordering for some of the more common uses of ngRepeat. In the example below, track by
is infront of the pipe, |
, when it actually belongs after filter:searchText
. AngularHintDirective would notify you that the usage is incorrect and that you should instead try item in items | filter:searchText track by item.id
.
<ul>
<li ng-repeat="item in items track by item.id | filter:searchText">
{{item.name}} - {{item.price}}
</li>
</ul>
Missing Namespace
It is important for the components we create to have their own unique namespace so as to not conflict with exsisting components in Angular or external libraries that may be used. The best practice for namespaces it to use lowerCamelCase and a unique prefix
for the scope of an application. For example, in the code below, if a directive with name 'mycomponent' was created, you would be warned to use a more appropriate name.
angular.module('breadcrumbs').
directive('mycomponent', function() { ... };
});
Improved namespace:
angular.module('breadcrumbs').
directive('abMyComponent', function() { ... };
});
A prefix like ab
that is defined uniquely for the scope of an application (think of the ng
prefix
used for AngularJS directives) ensures that custom directives defined with that prefix are less
likely to conflict with the names given to AngularJS directives or directives loaded from third
parties.
##Contributing
Want to improve AngularHintEvents or other facets of AngularHint? We'd love to get your help! See the Contributing Guidelines.
Copyright 2014 Google, Inc. http://angularjs.org
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
You may obtain a copy of the License at
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
limitations under the License.