ng-annotate
ng-annotate adds and removes AngularJS dependency injection annotations.
It is non-intrusive so your source code stays exactly the same otherwise.
No lost comments or moved lines.
Without annotations:
angular.module("MyMod").controller("MyCtrl", function($scope, $timeout) {
});
With annotations:
angular.module("MyMod").controller("MyCtrl", ["$scope", "$timeout", function($scope, $timeout) {
}]);
Annotations are useful because with them you're able to minify your source code using your
favorite JS minifier.
How does ng-annotate compare to ngmin?
If you are currently using ngmin then this is probably your first question. In short:
ng-annotate is much faster, finds more declarations to annotate (including ui-router),
treats your source code better, is actively maintained and has a bunch of extra features
on top of that. A much more elaborated answer can be found in
"The future of ngmin and ng-annotate".
Installation and usage
npm install -g ng-annotate
Then run it as ng-annotate OPTIONS file.js
. The errors (if any) will go to stderr,
the transpiled source to stdout, so redirect it like ng-annotate file.js > output.js
.
Use the --add
(-a
) option to add annotations where non-existing,
use --remove
(-r
) to remove all existing annotations,
use --add --remove
(-ar
) to rebuild all annotations.
Use the --single_quotes
option to output '$scope'
instead of "$scope"
.
Use the --regexp
option in case you want to restrict matching further (rarely used). See
description further down.
Use the --plugin
option to load a user plugin with the provided path (experimental,
0.9.x may change API). See plugin-example.js for more info.
Use the --stats
option to print statistics on stderr (experimental).
Tools support
Changes
See CHANGES.md.
Why?
- Keep your code base clutter free from annotations but add them in your build step
prior to minimizing
- De-clutter an existing code base by removing annotations, non-intrusively
- If you must store annotations in the repo (for any reason) then checkout,
remove them, code and refactor without annotations, add them back and commit.
Alternatively checkout, code and refactor (ignoring annotations), rebuild them and commit.
Declaration forms
ng-annotate understands the two common declaration forms:
Long form:
angular.module("MyMod").controller("MyCtrl", function($scope, $timeout) {
});
Short form:
myMod.controller("MyCtrl", function($scope, $timeout) {
});
It's not limited to .controller
of course. It understands .config
, .factory
,
.directive
, .filter
, .run
, .controller
, .provider
, .service
and .animation
.
For short forms it does not need to see the declaration of myMod
so you can run it
on your individual source files without concatenating. If ng-annotate detects a short form
false positive then you can use the --regexp
option to limit the module identifier.
Examples: --regexp "^myMod$"
(match only myMod
) or --regexp "^$"
(ignore short forms).
ng-annotate understands this.$get = function($scope) ..
and
{.., $get: function($scope) ..}
inside a provider
. self
and that
can be used as
aliases for this
.
ng-annotate understands return {.., controller: function($scope) ..}
inside a
directive
.
ng-annotate understands $provide.decorator("bar", function($scope) ..)
and other methods
on provide
such as factory
.
ng-annotate understands $routeProvider.when("path", { .. })
.
ng-annotate understands $httpProvider.interceptors.push(function($scope) ..)
and
$httpProvider.responseInterceptors.push(function($scope) ..)
.
ng-annotate understands ui-router ($stateProvider
and
$urlRouterProvider
).
ng-annotate understands $modal.open
(angular-ui/bootstrap).
experimental
ng-annotate understands chaining.
Explicit annotations
You can prepend a function expression with /* @ngInject */
to explicitly state that this
function should get annotated. ng-annotate will leave the comment intact and will thus still
be able to also remove or rewrite such annotations. Use /* @ngInject */
as an occasional
workaround when ng-annotate doesn't support your code style but feel free to open an issue
also.
var x = /* @ngInject */ function($scope) {};
obj = {controller: /*@ngInject*/ function($scope) {}};
obj.bar = /*@ngInject*/ function($scope) {};
=>
var x = /* @ngInject */ ["$scope", function($scope) {}];
obj = {controller: /*@ngInject*/ ["$scope", function($scope) {}]};
obj.bar = /*@ngInject*/ ["$scope", function($scope) {}];
Prepended to an object literal, /* @ngInject */
will annotate all of its contained
function expressions, recursively:
obj = /*@ngInject*/ {
controller: function($scope) {},
resolve: {
data: function(Service) {},
},
};
=>
obj = /*@ngInject*/ {
controller: ["$scope", function($scope) {}],
resolve: {
data: ["Service", function(Service) {}],
},
};
Prepended to a function statement or a single variable declaration initialized with a
function expression, /* @ngInject */
will attach an $injects
array to the function:
// @ngInject
function Foo($scope) {}
// @ngInject
var foo = function($scope) {}
=>
// @ngInject
function Foo($scope) {}
Foo.$injects = ["$scope"];
// @ngInject
var foo = function($scope) {}
foo.$injects = ["$scope"];
Issues and compatibility
If ng-annotate does not handle a construct you're using, if there's a bug or if you have a feature
request then please file an issue.
Build and test
ng-annotate is written in ES6 constlet style and uses defs.js
to transpile to ES5. See BUILD.md for build and test instructions.
License
MIT
, see LICENSE file.
ng-annotate is written by Olov Lassus with the kind help by
contributors.
Follow @olov on Twitter for updates about ng-annotate.
Performance
ng-annotate is designed to be very fast (in general limited by parse speed).
It traverses the AST exactly once and transforms it without the need for an AST -> source
decompilation step.
Library (API)
ng-annotate can be used as a library. See ng-annotate.js for further info about
options and return value.
var ngAnnotate = require("ng-annotate");
var somePlugin = require("./some/path/some-plugin");
var res = ngAnnotate(src, {add: true, plugin: [somePlugin]})
var errorstringArray = res.errors;
var transformedSource = res.src;