react-angular
Use AngularJS 1.x templates in react components
When converting an application from Angular to React, or using React in an Angular application,
we usually use ngReact
to embed our React components.
However, it is then close to impossible to use existing AngularJS directives inside the React components.
Or rather, it was…
ReactAngular
allows you to use AngularJS templates, directives, controllers and services inside a React component.
It does so by providing a React component, called AngularTemplate
,
to which you pass the template and controller you want to use.
Installation
npm install react-angular
ReactAngular
requires React and Angular (of course!),
although it isn't materialized in dependencies.
It should work fine with React 0.14+ and Angular 1.2+, but is really only tested with React 15 and Angular 1.5.
Usage
Rendering JSX Children
import React from 'react';
import AngularTemplate from 'react-angular';
export default function SomeComponent(props) {
return (<AngularTemplate scope={{
label: props.label,
onClick: ($event) => console.log($event),
}}>
<div data-ng-click="onClick($event)">{'{{label}}'}</div>
</AngularTemplate>);
}
Contrary to template rendering, AngularTemplate
will not wrap your child into a wrapper div
.
There can only be one child to AngularTemplate
.
Once the template is rendered, AngularTemplate
will leave the control to AngularJS for DOM updates.
Props updates will not be applied.
The AngularJS application must already be started
(Angular module must be defined and ng-app
must be present on a parent element).
There are a number of React rendering gotchas you must be aware of when using JSX to render AngularJS templates:
- Angular's
{{}}
expression syntax has meaning in JSX. The easiest way to use an expression is to pass a string with the expression in it (like in the example above:{'{{label}}'}
). - React will treat an HTML tag with a dash in it (like a lot of directives) to be custom components.
On custom components attributes transformation does not happen, e.g.:
-
className
should be writtenclass
again (this is important:className
will not work) - There is no need to prefix custom attributes with
data-
-
- Do not try to reference the first child with
ref
.AngularTemplate
will 'steal' the reference. Instead referenceAngularTemplate
and access the first child through$element
(see API below).
Rendering a Template
import React from 'react';
import AngularTemplate from 'react-angular';
import styles from './someStyles.css';
import template from './someTemplate.[pug,jade,html]';
import controller from './someController';
export default function SomeComponent(props) {
return <AngularTemplate
className={styles.wrapper}
template={template}
controller={controller}
controllerAs="ctl"
inject={props}/>
}
AngularTemplate
will render the AngularJS template in a wrapper div
.
The wrapper div
is fully customizable (see Advanced Usage below).
Once the template is rendered, AngularTemplate
will leave the control to AngularJS for DOM updates.
Props updates will not be applied.
The AngularJS application must already be started
(Angular module must be defined and ng-app
must be present on a parent element).
Basic Props
String
className: The class to apply to the wrapper div
.
This allows you to control how the wrapper (and the directive inside it) is displayed in your page.
This class will be added to the child JSX element if you're using JSX templates, in addition to any class defined on the child itself.
String|Function
controller: The controller to apply to the template. This is a definition of a controller as in any AngularJS template or route.
This may be:
- A controller name (
String
): The controller will be found in the controllers declared in the AngularJS application - A controller constructor (
Function
): The controller constructor will be used as-is. - A "controllerAs" expression (
String
): The controller will be instantiated from the AngularJS application and bound to the scope.
Controller will be injected with the scope,
the wrapper element,
the services defined in the application
and all properties defined in the inject
prop.
String
controllerAs: Bind the controller to a variable in the scope. This is like the controllerAs
parameter in route definitions.
This is the preferred way to bind a controller to a template.
An alternative is to use the "controllerAs" syntax in the controller
prop.
Object
inject: A key-value pair of data to inject into the controller.
If the template is a function (e.g. a Pug/Jade template), the values defined here will also be passed to the template function.
Example:
controller.js
:
/* @ngInject */
export default function MyController($document, someClass) {
this.hasClass = $document.find('body').hasClass(someClass);
}
MyComponent.jsx
:
import React from 'react';
import AngularTemplate from 'react-angular';
import controler from './controller';
export default function MyComponent(props) {
return <AngularTemplate
template="<div ng-class='{ active: doc.hasClass }'></div>"
controller={controller}
controllerAs="doc"
inject={{
someClass: 'document-active',
}}
/>;
}
Boolean
isolate: Create an isolate scope instead of a normal scope.
You may use this to enforce component isolation at the AngularJS level.
Boolean|Object
scope: Should a scope be created for the wrapper element ?
By default a scope will be created. You can prevent this by passing false
to this prop.
You should not pass false
if you are using a controller.
If you pass an object, any value in the object will be copied to the created scope.
Example:
import React from 'react';
import AngularTemplate from 'react-angular';
export default function MyComponent(props) {
return <AngularTemplate
template="<div ng-bind='someValue'></div>"
scope={{
someValue: props.value || 'unknown',
}}
/>;
}
String|Function
template: The template to use.
You can specify a string (loaded from HTML or directly in the prop), or a function (generated in JS or a Pug/Jade import).
If you specify a function, the object provided in inject
will be passed as the first argument.
If both template
and templateUrl
are specified, template
will be used.
You should not use template
when using JSX children.
If you choose to do it anyway, the template will be included after the children.
String
templateUrl: Use a template from Angular's template cache. This allows you to use a template loader or template scripts as the template source.
If both template
and templateUrl
are specified, template
will be used.
You should not use templateUrl
when using JSX children.
If you choose to do it anyway, the template will be included after the children.
String
wrapperTag: The wrapper tag to use. By default it is a div
.
You can change it to a span
or anything else,
even an element directive (see Advanced Usage below).
wrapperTag
is completely ignored when using JSX children.
Object
wrapperAttrs: Attributes to apply to the wrapper element.
These will be passed as in JSX, e.g. all non-standard attributes have to be prefixed with data-
.
No transformation will be applied to the attributes, so they have to be passed as in HTML
(e.g. pass data-ng-bind
, not 'ngBind').
On a custom component wrapper, no transformation is applied (see Rendering JSX Children above).
wrapperAttrs
are applied to the root JSX child when using JSX children rendering.
Known Caveats and Limitations
Property flow
Since AngularJS and React have a different approach to updating the DOM, property updates will not be propagated to the managed scope or controller.
You should never count on Angular updating a property passed to AngularTemplate
,
although AngularTemplate
does not do anything to prevent it.
If you want to watch scope changes, you should reference the AngularTemplate
instance and add watchers to the scope
(see Advanced Usage below).
require()
Using Since the library is written in ES6 and transpiled with Babel,
when using require()
instead of import
to import it,
you must explicitly ask for the default export:
var AngularTemplate = require('react-angular').default;
Advanced Usage
Wrapper element
By manipulating the wrapper tag (wrapperTag
and wrapperAttrs
props),
you can declare attribute directives directly on the wrapper element (e.g. data-ng-bind
),
or even insert an element directive directly as the wrapper tag.
API
By referencing the AngularTemplate
component,
you can get access to several component attributes that allow you to manipulate the created AngularJS structure:
-
$scope
: This is the scope used to compile the wrapper tag and the template. You can use this to add watchers or event handlers, or to send events. -
$element
: This is the wrapper element as a JQLite element. You can use this to further manipulate or query the DOM. When using directives that mutate the root element,$element
may not represent the actual content of the DOM since it could have been replaced, changed, duplicated or removed from the DOM. The API makes no attempt at keeping$element
up-to-date with extreme and borderline manipulations.
Example:
import React from 'react';
import AngularTemplate from 'react-angular';
export default class MyComponent {
componentDidMount() {
this.reactAngular.$scope.$watch(
'someValue',
(newValue) => console.log(newValue)
);
}
render() {
return <AngularTemplate
ref={(reactAngular) => this.reactAngular = reactAngular}
template="<div ng-click='someValue++'></div>"
scope={{
someValue: props.value || 'unknown',
}}
/>;
}
}
Roadmap
- Support for easily creating "directive components", e.g. the inverse of ngReact's reactDirective function
- Better doc (this one is kinda messy, although pretty much complete)
- Support other module loaders?
Contributing
Contributions to the documentation and the code are welcome, just make a PR!
Remember to contribute the test along with the feature (or the test that shows up the bug).
To run a continuous build:
npm run build:watch
To run continuous testing:
npm run test:watch
Authors and license
This library is licenced under the MIT licence (see LICENCE file).
Authors:
- Fabien Mauquié
Changelog
v0.2.0
- Change directive name to
AngularTemplate
(better readability) - JSX children rendering
v0.1.0
- Initial version
- ReactAngular component
- Template rendering