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GitHub - Indigosoft/ngxd: ✨🦊 NgComponentOutlet + Data-Binding + Full Lifecycle = NgxComponentOutlet for Angular 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16+
✨🦊 NgComponentOutlet + Data-Binding + Full Lifecycle = NgxComponentOutlet for Angular 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16+ - Indigosoft/ngxd
Visit SiteGitHub - Indigosoft/ngxd: ✨🦊 NgComponentOutlet + Data-Binding + Full Lifecycle = NgxComponentOutlet for Angular 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16+
✨🦊 NgComponentOutlet + Data-Binding + Full Lifecycle = NgxComponentOutlet for Angular 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16+ - Indigosoft/ngxd
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✨🦊 NGX Dynamic for Angular Ivy and Angular 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16+
🥳 Best way to quickly use Dynamic Components with Angular
Use like NgComponentOutlet
but with @Input
and @Output
auto bindings:
<ng-container *ngxComponentOutlet="component"></ng-container>
Here is a demo example showing NGX Dynamic and Angular in action.
Getting started
Step 1: Install @ngxd/core
:
npm install --save @ngxd/core
# or
yarn add @ngxd/core
Note: @ngxd/core@12 only supports angular with Ivy is enabled
Note: If you want to use @ngxd/core with a specific angular version, you have to install @ngxd/core which version you need:
- @angular/core@7 => npm install @ngxd/core@7
- @angular/core@8 => npm install @ngxd/core@8
- @angular/core@9 => npm install @ngxd/core@9
- @angular/core@10 => npm install @ngxd/core@10
- @angular/core@11 => npm install @ngxd/core@11
- @angular/core@12 => npm install @ngxd/core@12
- @angular/core@13 => npm install @ngxd/core@13
- @angular/core@14 => npm install @ngxd/core@14
- @angular/core@15 => npm install @ngxd/core@15
- @angular/core@16 => npm install @ngxd/core@16
Step 2: Import the NgxdModule:
import { NgxdModule } from '@ngxd/core';
@NgModule({
declarations: [ AppComponent ],
// have import NgxdModule here 👇
imports: [ BrowserModule, NgxdModule ],
bootstrap: [ AppComponent ]
})
export class AppModule {}
Step 3: Use NgxComponentOutlet directly:
@Component({
template: `
<ng-container *ngxComponentOutlet="component"></ng-container>`
// using @ngxd/core 👆
})
class MyComponent {
// your dynamic component 👇
component = DynamicComponent;
// 🥳 inputs and outputs will binding automatically
@Input() entity;
@Output() action;
}
Use cases
There are several modes of operation of the directive.
1. Binding inputs and outputs
A simple variant of binding through the parent component.
@Component({
template: `
<ng-container *ngxComponentOutlet="component"></ng-container>`
// using @ngxd/core 👆
})
class MyComponent {
// your dynamic component 👇
component = DynamicComponent;
// 🥳 inputs and outputs will binding automatically
@Input() entity;
@Output() action;
}
Binding inputs through the context
Note: You not permitted to passing the outputs using the context. The context will be passing inputs only.
In the example below, you can see the binding through the context. This is useful when you need to display something through *ngFor. Note that the context has a higher priority than the inputs in the component.
<ng-container *ngFor="let color of colors"
<ng-container *ngxComponentOutlet="
component; context: { color: color }
"></ng-container>
</ng-container>
2. Switching the component
To switch a component, you just need to overwrite it with another one.
class AppComponent {
ngOnChanges(changes: SimpleChanges): void {
if ('type' in changes) {
switch (this.type) {
case 'number':
this.component = NumberComponent;
break;
case 'text':
this.component = TextComponent;
break;
default:
this.component = DefaultComponent;
}
}
}
}
Switching the component using pipe and resolver
If you have a bunch of components, then you go to switch between them. To do this, you can use NgxdResolvePipe and NgxdResolver to help you isolate dynamic component selection.
<ng-container *ngxComponentOutlet="
resolver | resolve : type
"></ng-container>
3. Lazy loading the dynamic component
If you need to load and display a dynamic component lazily, then you can use lazy import and pass it to the async pipe.
component = import('./my-lazy-component')
.then(m => m.MyLazyComponent);
<ng-container *ngxComponentOutlet="
component | async
"></ng-container>
Lazy loading bunch of dynamic components
You can also load a bunch of components lazily and render them.
resolver = import('./my-lazy-resolver')
.then(m => m.myLazyResolver);
<ng-container *ngxComponentOutlet="
resolver | async | resolve : type
"></ng-container>
4. Content projection
If you want to use the <ng-content>
and pass the content to your dynamic component, you have to check the example below.
Comparison
Feature | NgxComponentOutlet | ComponentFactoryResolver | NgComponentOutlet |
---|---|---|---|
Friendliness | ⭐⭐⭐ | ⭐ | ⭐⭐ |
Dynamic Components | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
AOT support | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
Reactivity | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
Injector | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
NgModule | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
projectionNodes | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
Component Access | ✅ | ✅ | ❌ |
Lifecycle OnChanges | ✅ | ⭕️ manually | ❌ |
Binding @Input() |
✅ | ⭕️ manually | ❌ |
Binding @Output() |
✅ | ⭕️ manually | ❌ |
Activate Event | ✅ | ⭕️ manually | ❌ |
Deactivate Event | ✅ | ⭕️ manually | ❌ |
API
Input | Type | Default | Required | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
[ngxComponentOutlet] |
Type<any> |
n/a | yes | |
[ngxComponentOutletContext] |
any |
n/a | no | |
[ngxComponentOutletInjector] |
Injector |
n/a | no | |
[ngxComponentOutletContent] |
any[][] |
n/a | no |
Output | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
(ngxComponentOutletActivate) |
any |
|
(ngxComponentOutletDeactivate) |
any |
Angular Resources
are all listed below.
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