This small repository provides ObservableInput decorator to use Angular component input attributes as RxJS Observables.
Angular AOT compiler support from version 2.0.0
Look for changes in CHANGELOG.md file.
There are many threads on Angular developer forums about treating input as observable streams. Instead of manually checking the changes in ngOnChanges hook this library provides a simple addition to @Input()
decorator that does all the magic behind the scenes.
Install the library:
npm install ngx-observable-input
Let's say that we want to create an image-item
component that takes an url
as an input attribute. The parent gallery
component has a currentImageUrl
property that can change during runtime:
...
<image-item [url]="currentImageUrl"></image-item>
We can treat that url
input as an observable in our image-item
component by using @ObservableInput
decorator:
import { Component } from "@angular/core";
import { ObservableInput } from "ngx-observable-input";
import { Observable } from "rxjs";
@Component({
selector: "image-item",
template: `<img [src]="url$ | async" />`
})
export class GalleryComponent {
@ObservableInput() @Input("url") public url$: Observable<string>;
...
}
Simple as that!
Since version 3.0.0 the behavior of unused (not set) input attributes has changed. Previously the observable was undefined
. Now the observable is initiated by a defaultValue
argument provided to the decorator: @ObservableInput(defaultValue: any)
. This allows developer to safely subscribe to such observables without null-checking first.
The @Input
decorator is often used without the parameter, but when working with @ObservableInput
it in most cases shouldn't. The parameter is used as an attribute name in HTML templates and if omited will use the name of the property that it decorates. It is okay for non-observable @Input
but one should stick to the guidelines of observable naming convention: https://angular.io/guide/rx-library#naming-conventions-for-observables
Using this convention without @Input
parameter will end in non-standard attribute name for Angular component. For example:
@ObservableInput() @Input("url") public url$: Observable<string>;
where we have url
attribute:
<image-item url="{{ currentImageUrl }}"></image-item>
is much more preferrable than:
@ObservableInput() @Input() public url$: Observable<string>;
where we have non-intuitive url$
attribute
<image-item url$="{{ currentImageUrl }}"></image-item>
Using @Input
parameter will cause TSLint warnings with no-input-rename
rule enabled.
If you are using Ivy compiler (Angular 9+) it is possible to enable strictTemplates checking in tsconfig.ts file. This will cause errors since the compiler interprets inputs decorated with @ObservableInput
as an Observable<T>
instead of T
. For now the only known way is to use strictInputTypes compiler option:
"strictInputTypes": false
This will disable only inputs type validation and will leave all other checks enabled.