Compels AngularJS to be friendly to ES6/ES2015 classes. It will be sweet to these fellows from now on.
Wouldn't it be great to benefit from OOP application design and do something like this?
app.directive('appDirective', AppDirectiveClass);
Yes. And... no. This will cause the exception to be thrown right in developer's face. Depending on ES6 implementation, it may be
TypeError: Cannot call a class as a function
for Babel transpiler, or similar killjoy for Traceur and any JavaScript engine with native ES6 class support. That's right, class constructors should be new
ed. They cannot be called directly, but that's what $injector.invoke
is trying to do. Bad injector, stupid invoke.
Naturally, the code above will end up as
app.directive('appDirective', (() => {
let fn = (...deps) => new AppDirectiveClass(...deps);
fn.$inject = AppDirectiveClass.$inject;
return fn;
})()
);
Wouldn't it be great to pollute the application with WET boilerplate wrapper hacks? Yes? Or... no?
This extension patches Angular $injector
service in polite but urgent manner to give ES6 classes the treatment they deserve.
npm install --save ng-classified
bower install --save ng-classified
Relying on several conditions, $injector.invoke
(which stands behind all DI in Angular) detects if the supplied function is a class constructor and should be called with new
, not directly. Wraps the call to invoked function with try…catch
, if necessary. It does all magic when Angular components are defined.
As with functions, $inject
static property is used to annotate class constructor.
static $inject = […]
(ES7). Or ClassName.$inject = […]
(ES6).
The dependencies will be annotated automatically in unminified code. Array annotations are not supported intentionally.
$classify
static property should be defined on classes in order for the injector to detect them unambiguously.
static $classify = true
(ES7). Or ClassName.$classify = true
(ES6).
Native (non-transpiled) Chrome/V8 classes can be certainly detected and don't need this property.
Initially defines the behaviour of ngClassified
module within application. It is not defined by default (assumed to be undefined
) and supposed to be constant
service to be ready-to-serve at configuration phase.
app.constant('$classify', true);
Possible values are:
undefined
(default). Provides heuristic approach to class detection (tries-catches only the functions which are believed to be class constructors). Suitable for production and unminified code.false
. Detects native Chrome/V8 classes, relies on$classify
property otherwise. Suitable for production and minified code.true
. Tries-catches everything, provides considerable performance penalty. Suitable for development and minified code.
TS. No pun intended.
The usage for average ES6/ES7 project is
import { ngClassified } from 'ng-classified';
import { JoeConfig } from 'joe-config';
import { JoeController } from 'joe-controller';
import { JoeDirective } from 'joe-directive';
angular.module('average', [ngClassified])
.constant('$classify', false)
.config(JoeConfig)
.controller('JoeController', JoeController)
.directive('joeDirective', JoeDirective);
export class JoeConfig {
static $classify = true;
constructor(averageUnannotatedProvider) {
…
}
}
export class JoeController {
static $classify = true;
scopeProperty = { … };
}
export class JoeDirective {
static $classify = true;
static $inject = ['dependency'];
constructor(...deps) {
let depNames = this.constructor.$inject;
Object.defineProperty(this, '$', {
value: {}
});
depNames.forEach((depName, i) => {
this.$[depName] = deps[i];
});
}
scope = {};
controller = 'JoeController';
controllerAs = 'Joe';
link = () => {
this.$.dependency…;
}
}
See also specs for more details on the use.
The extension itself doesn't use specific ES6 features. ES5 Function.prototype.bind
is being used, it has to be be shimmed in PhantomJS and legacy browsers.