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Attackers Are Hunting High-Impact Node.js Maintainers in a Coordinated Social Engineering Campaign
Multiple high-impact npm maintainers confirm they have been targeted in the same social engineering campaign that compromised Axios.
react18-react2angular
Advanced tools
The easiest way to embed React components in Angular 1 apps! react 18 compatible
The easiest way to embed React components in Angular 1 apps! (opposite of angular2react)
this version can be used with React 18 and probably up
# Using Yarn:
yarn add react2angular react react-dom prop-types
# Or, using NPM:
npm install react2angular react react-dom prop-types --save
import { Component } from "react";
class MyComponent extends Component {
render() {
return (
<div>
<p>FooBar: {this.props.fooBar}</p>
<p>Baz: {this.props.baz}</p>
</div>
);
}
}
import { react2angular } from "react2angular";
angular
.module("myModule", [])
.component("myComponent", react2angular(MyComponent, ["fooBar", "baz"]));
Note: If you defined propTypes on your component, they will be used to compute component's bindings, and you can omit the 2nd argument:
...
.component('myComponent', react2angular(MyComponent))
If propTypes are defined and you passed in a 2nd argument, the argument will override propTypes.
<my-component foo-bar="3" baz="'baz'"></my-component>
Note: All React props are converted to AngularJS one-way bindings. If you are passing functions into your React component, they need to be passed as a function ref, rather than as an invokable expression. Keeping an existing AngularJS-style expression will result in infinite loops as the function re-evaluates on each digest loop.
It's easy to pass services/constants/etc. to your React component: just pass them in as the 3rd argument, and they will be available in your component's Props. For example:
import { Component } from "react";
import { react2angular } from "react2angular";
class MyComponent extends Component {
state = {
data: "",
};
componentDidMount() {
this.props.$http
.get("/path")
.then((res) => this.setState({ data: res.data }));
}
render() {
return (
<div>
{this.props.FOO}
{this.state.data}
</div>
);
}
}
angular
.module("myModule", [])
.constant("FOO", "FOO!")
.component("myComponent", react2angular(MyComponent, [], ["$http", "FOO"]));
Note: If you have an injection that matches the name of a prop, then the value will be resolved with the injection, not the prop.
npm test
Apache2
FAQs
The easiest way to embed React components in Angular 1 apps! react 18 compatible
The npm package react18-react2angular receives a total of 3,623 weekly downloads. As such, react18-react2angular popularity was classified as popular.
We found that react18-react2angular 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.
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Security News
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Security News
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Security News
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