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Angular 2 Cookbook

You're reading from   Angular 2 Cookbook Discover over 70 recipes that provide the solutions you need to know to face every challenge in Angular 2 head on

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jan 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781785881923
Length 464 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Authors (2):
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Matthew Frisbie Matthew Frisbie
Author Profile Icon Matthew Frisbie
Matthew Frisbie
Patrick Gillespie Patrick Gillespie
Author Profile Icon Patrick Gillespie
Patrick Gillespie
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Toc

Table of Contents (11) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Strategies for Upgrading to Angular 2 FREE CHAPTER 2. Conquering Components and Directives 3. Building Template-Driven and Reactive Forms 4. Mastering Promises 5. ReactiveX Observables 6. The Component Router 7. Services, Dependency Injection, and NgModule 8. Application Organization and Management 9. Angular 2 Testing 10. Performance and Advanced Concepts

Downgrading Angular 2 components to Angular 1 directives with downgradeComponent

If you have followed the steps in Connecting Angular 1 and Angular 2 with UpgradeModule, you should now have a hybrid application that is capable of sharing different elements with the opposing framework.

Tip

If you are unfamiliar with Angular 2 components, it is recommended that you go through the components chapter before you proceed.

This recipe will allow you to fully utilize Angular 2 components inside an Angular 1 template.

Note

The code, links, and a live example in relation to this recipe are available at http://ngcookbook.herokuapp.com/1499/.

Getting ready

Suppose you had the following Angular 2 component that you wanted to use in an Angular 1 application:

[app/article.component.ts] 
 
import {Component, Input} from '@angular/core'; 
 
@Component({ 
  selector: 'ng2-article', 
  template: ` 
    <h1>{{title}}</h1> 
    <p>Written by: {{author}}</p> 
  ` 
}) 
export class ArticleComponent { 
  @Input() author:string 
  title:string = 'Unicycle Jousting Recognized as Olympic Sport'; 
} 

Begin by completing the Connecting Angular 1 and Angular 2 with UpgradeModule recipe.

How to do it...

Angular 1 has no comprehension of how to utilize Angular 2 components. The existing Angular 2 framework will dutifully render it if given the opportunity, but the definition itself must be connected to the Angular 1 framework so that it may be requested when needed.

Begin by adding the component declarations to the module definition; this is used to link the two frameworks:

[app/app.module.ts] 
 
import {NgModule} from '@angular/core'; 
import {BrowserModule} from '@angular/platform-browser'; 
import {UpgradeModule} from '@angular/upgrade/static'; 
import {RootComponent} from './root.component'; 
import {ArticleComponent} from './article.component'; 
 
@NgModule({ 
  imports: [ 
    BrowserModule, 
    UpgradeModule, 
  ], 
  declarations: [ 
    RootComponent, 
    ArticleComponent 
  ], 
  bootstrap: [ 
    RootComponent 
  ] 
}) 
export class Ng2AppModule { 
  constructor(public upgrade: UpgradeModule){} 
} 

This connects the component declaration to the Angular 2 context, but Angular 1 still has no concept of how to interface with it. For this, you'll need to use downgradeComponent() to define the Angular 2 component as an Angular 1 directive. Give the Angular 1 directive a different HTML tag to render inside so you can be certain that it's Angular 1 doing the rendering and not Angular 2:

[main.ts] 
 
import {Component, Input} from '@angular/core'; 
import {downgradeComponent} from '@angular/upgrade/static'; 
import {Ng1AppModule} from './ng1.module'; 
 
@Component({ 
  selector: 'ng2-article', 
  template: ` 
    <h1>{{title}}</h1> 
    <p>Written by: {{author}}</p> 
  ` 
}) 
export class ArticleComponent { 
  @Input() author:string 
  title:string = 'Unicycle Jousting Recognized as Olympic Sport'; 
} 
 
Ng1AppModule.directive( 
  'ng1Article', 
  downgradeComponent({component: ArticleComponent})); 

Finally, since this component has an input, you'll need to pass this value via a binding attribute. Even though the component is still being declared as an Angular 1 directive, you'll use the Angular 2 binding syntax:

[index.html] 
 
<!DOCTYPE html> 
<html> 
  <head> 
    <!-- Angular 2 scripts --> 
    <script src="zone.js "></script> 
    <script src="reflect-metadata.js"></script> 
    <script src="system.js"></script> 
    <script src="system-config.js"></script> 
  </head> 
  <body> 
    <div ng-init="authorName='Jake Hsu'"> 
      <ng1-article [author]="authorName"></ng1-article> 
    </div> 
    <root></root> 
  </body> 
</html> 

The input and output must be explicitly declared at the time of conversion:

[app/article.component.ts] 
 
import {Component, Input} from '@angular/core'; 
import {downgradeComponent} from '@angular/upgrade/static'; 
import {Ng1AppModule} from './ng1.module'; 
 
@Component({ 
  selector: 'ng2-article', 
  template: ` 
    <h1>{{title}}</h1> 
    <p>Written by: {{author}}</p> 
  ` 
}) 
export class ArticleComponent { 
  @Input() author:string 
  title:string = 'Unicycle Jousting Recognized as Olympic Sport'; 
} 
 
Ng1AppModule.directive( 
  'ng1Article', 
  downgradeComponent({ 
    component: ArticleComponent,  
    inputs: ['author'] 
  })); 

These are all the steps required. If done properly, you should see the component render along with the author's name being interpolated inside the Angular 2 component through Angular 1's ng-init definition.

How it works...

You are giving Angular 1 the ability to direct Angular 2 to a certain element in the DOM and say, "I need you to render here." Angular 2 still controls the component view and operation, and in every sense, the main thing we really care about is a full Angular 2 component adapted for use in an Angular 1 template.

Tip

downgradeComponent() takes an object specifying the component as an argument and returns the function that Angular 1 is expecting for the directive definition.

See also

  • Connecting Angular 1 and Angular 2 with UpgradeModule shows you how to run Angular 1 and 2 frameworks together
  • Downgrade Angular 2 providers to Angular 1 services with downgradeInjectable demonstrates how to use an Angular 2 service inside an Angular 1 application
You have been reading a chapter from
Angular 2 Cookbook
Published in: Jan 2017
Publisher: Packt
ISBN-13: 9781785881923
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