Security News
Fluent Assertions Faces Backlash After Abandoning Open Source Licensing
Fluent Assertions is facing backlash after dropping the Apache license for a commercial model, leaving users blindsided and questioning contributor rights.
Syntactic sugar utils for Angular. This project was generated with Angular CLI version 10.0.3 (boilerplate is frightening though).
npm install --save ng-sugar
or
yarn add ng-sugar
Reduce the boilerplate in rxjs-first workflows. Angular itself is not centered around rxjs yet it uses it to a degree, where at times logic starts looking convoluted and a bit boilerplaty when we start mixing observables with component lifecycle, Inputs, ViewChild, etc.
For example, let's say we want to make a component that can define its own navigation items and pass it back to parent component that manages the appshell's navigation bar. One way would be to write:
@Component({
selector: 'hero-component',
template: `
<p>Hero Component</p>
<ng-template #items>
<button mat-icon-button>
<mat-icon>arrow_drop_up</mat-icon>
</button>
</ng-template>
`
})
export class HeroComponent {
@ViewChild("items", {static: false}) items: TemplateRef<any>
@Output() appbarItems = new EventEmitter<TemplateRef<any>>()
ngAfterViewInit(): void {
this.appbarItems.emit(this.items)
}
}
Doing this is totally fine as long as there no code that will run prior to ngAfterViewInit()
that touches this.items
which are undefined in that case.
As an alternative, we can utilize ObservableComponent
that has lifecycle hooks as observables, then expessing our logic on top of this observable. Above will now look like:
import {ObservableComponent} from "ng-sugar";
//...
export class HeroComponent extends ObservableComponent {
@ViewChild("items", {static: false}) items: TemplateRef<any>
// emits once on afterViewInit
items$ = this.afterViewInit.pipe(map(() => this.items))
@Output() appbarItems = new EventEmitter<TemplateRef<any>>()
constructor(){
super()
this.items$.subscribe(
items => this.appbarItems.emit(items),
console.error)
}
}
This is a small set of utils that might be part of Angular core itself one day. It consists of
Inheriting from ObservableComponent
adds an observable counterpart to every lifecycle hook (with ng prefix removed).
ngAfterViewInit in the below example is available as this.afterViewInit
:
import {ObservableComponent} from "ng-sugar";
//...
export class HeroComponent extends ObservableComponent {
@ViewChild("items", {static: false}) items: TemplateRef<any>
// emits once on afterViewInit
items$ = this.afterViewInit.pipe(map(() => this.items))
}
We can unwrap an observable inside a template using *ngIf directive utilizing as
binding, like:
<ng-container *ngIf="groupId$ | async as groupId">
</ng-container>
Before groupId$ emits or if it is null, above ng-container
won't be rendered to the DOM. When it is not desired, replacing the above with *ngLet
handles this usecase:
<ng-container *ngLet="groupId$ | async as groupId">
</ng-container>
See insidewhy/observable-input
Check CONTIBUTING.md
FAQs
Syntactic sugar utils for Angular.
The npm package ng-sugar receives a total of 0 weekly downloads. As such, ng-sugar popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that ng-sugar demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer 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
Fluent Assertions is facing backlash after dropping the Apache license for a commercial model, leaving users blindsided and questioning contributor rights.
Research
Security News
Socket researchers uncover the risks of a malicious Python package targeting Discord developers.
Security News
The UK is proposing a bold ban on ransomware payments by public entities to disrupt cybercrime, protect critical services, and lead global cybersecurity efforts.