1.2.5 • Published 7 years ago

ng-domain-prop v1.2.5

Weekly downloads
23
License
MIT
Repository
github
Last release
7 years ago

ng-domain-prop

Any suggestion, bug or question please, open an issue!

If you like to define you own domain values in your angular 2 application perhaps once at least you wanted to do that:

export class MyClass {
	attr:MyType = new MyNumberWrapper();
}

myClass.attr = 5;
myClass.attr += 3;

Instead of:

export class MyClass {
	attr:MyType = new MyNumberWrapper();
}

myClass.attr = new MyNumberWrapper(3);
myClass.attr = new MyNumberWrapper(myClass.attr.getValue() + 5);

Or, perhaps you wanted to use that attribute in a form and have the your class correctelly instantiated:

/*The model will receave the user input value as a string value,
not as a MyNumberWrapper object*/
@Component({
	//Does not work as expected
	template: `<input [(ngMpodel)]='myClass.attr' />`
})
export class MyComponent{
	private myClass:MyClass = new MyClass();
}

The ng-domain-prop, is an angular library that helps you to use your own domain value types as angular2 models. It allows to work with the domain type much like they were javascript primitive types.

	Class CommaNumber extends DomainValue<number>{
		//...Validation and conversion stuff
	}

	@UsesDomainValues
	Class MyDomainClass {
	/*CommaNumber type behave much like a number although it is
	really a CommaNumber object.*/
	@DomainProperty(CommaNumber) value:any = 5;

		addSomeValue(ammount:number){
			/* You set the value from string or */
			this.value = '3,6';
			// You can set it from the primitive type. */
			this.value = 3.6;
			/* Its even possible to do math with the property
			(if the primitive type is a number ofcourse ;) ).*/
			this.value += number;  
		}
	}

	/*input from user will be converted and instantiated
	as a CommaNumber object*/
	@Component({
		template: `<input [(ngMpodel)]='myclass.value' />`
	})
	export class MyComponent{
		private myclass:MyDomainClass = new MyDomainClass();
	}

It also allows to easily configure angular forms to use your domain value validation:

/* The user input will be validated by CommaNumber class.*/
	@Component({
		template: `<input validate-domain [(ngMpodel)]='value' />`
	})
	export class MyComponent{
		private myclass:MyDomainClass = new MyDomainClass();
	}

Usage:

  1. First, the domain specific type must extends the DomainValue class:
abstract class DomainValue<PRIMITIVE_TYPE>{
	protected value:PRIMITIVE_TYPE;
	constructor(value:PRIMITIVE_TYPE));
	public equals(value:any):boolean;
	public setValue(value:any);
	public getValue();
	public valueOf():PRIMITIVE_TYPE;
	public isValid(value:string):boolean;
	protected primitiveTomPrimitive(value:PRIMITIVE_TYPE):PRIMITIVE_TYPE;
	protected abstract stringToPrimitive(value:string):PRIMITIVE_TYPE;
	primitiveToString():string;
}

All the methods have a default implementation, and you can override the following methods:

/**
* Gets the string value and convert to the apropriate primitive value.
* Override it to convert from string value the primitive type.
* The default implementation doesn't do any conversion so if
* you use other primitive type than string you MUST override it.
* @param {string} value - The string value to be converted.
*/
protected stringToPrimitive(value:string):PRIMITIVE_TYPE;

/**
* Returns the apropriate string representation of the value.
* Override it in case you want to convert the primitive value
* before is shown
* @param {value::PRIMITIVE_TYPE} value - The primitive value
* to be converted.
*/
primitiveToString(value::PRIMITIVE_TYPE):string;

/**
* Convert a primitive value before set the value.
* Override it in case you need to do some conversion on
* a primitive value.
* @param {value::PRIMITIVE_TYPE} value - The primitive value
* to be converted.
*/
primitiveToPrimitive(value:PRIMITIVE_TYPE):PRIMITIVE_TYPE

/**
* Determine whether a string input is valid or not.
* Override it if you want the use validation in angular2 forms.
* This method is also used by the lib to determine either the value
* will be converted from string or not. Invalid values will be
* stored without any conversion.
* In case of an invalid value the method toString() will return
* getInvalidValue() instead of the value itself.
* Default implmentation doesn't do any validation at all.
* @param {value::string} value - The string value to be validated.
*/
isValid(value:string):boolean;

/**
* Get a string representation null values (null, undefined
* or empty string).
* This method is called by toString() when this.value is null,
* undefined or ''.
* Override it if you want to change how null values are shown
* to the user.
* Default implmentation returns an empty string.
*/
protected getNullValue():string

/**
* Get a string representation of an invalid value.
* This method is called by toString() whenever isValid()
* returns false.
* Override it if you want to change how invalid values are
* shown to the user.
* Default implmentation returns the invalid value (this.value).
*/
protected getInvalidValue():string

Obs: The other methods are part of the public API or are used by the class itself, so overriging them can brake the library.

Example Implementation:

import {DomainValue} from 'ng-domain-prop/ng-domain-prop';

export class CommaNumber extends DomainValue<number>{

  /*You can use primitiveToPrimitive to do some conversion.
	E.g: Decimal digit truncation*/
	primitiveToPrimitive(value:number)number {
		return Math.floor(value*100)/100;
	}

  /*Converts from '00,00' to a valid javascript number */
  protected stringToPrimitivevalue:string):number {
    return parseFloat(value.replace(/,/, '.'));
  }

  /*Converts from number in the format 00.00 to a string
	in the format '00,00'*/
  public primitiveToString(value:number):string {
     return ("" + value).replace(/\./, ',');
  }

  /*Valid for inputs in the format '00,00'*/
  public isValid(value:string):boolean{
    return /^[0-9]+(,[0-9]+)?$/.test(value);
  }
}
  1. Second, the class containing the domaintype should be correctelly decorated:
	import {UsesDomainProperties, DomainProperty}
		from 'ng-domain-prop/ng-domain-prop';

	@UsesDomainValues //Tells the lib to configure domain type attributes
	Class MyDomainClass {
		/*Defines that the attribute should be treated as a domain type*/
		@DomainProperty(CommaNumber) value:number = 5;
	}

@UsesDomainValues works setting attributes decorated with @DomainProperty as a property accessor that returns a DomainValue object (CommaNumber in this case) and that accept setting its value from its primitive type, string or event from another DomainValue (CommaNumber) object.

v1.2.0 Update:

After version 1.2.0 you don't need the @UsesDomainValues decorator anymore, and its use has been deprecated:

	import { DomainProperty } from 'ng-domain-prop/ng-domain-prop';
	//@UsesDomainValues not needed anymore
	Class MyDomainClass {
		/*Defines that the attribute should be treated as a domain type*/
		@DomainProperty(CommaNumber) value:number = 5;
	}

Notice that although value is a CommaNumber object I used the number type for it. I did it to trick typescript so I can do some math on it. E.g:

this.value += 7;

This is possible because CommaNumber extends the DomainValue class that implements valueOf() method, wich returns its primitive value (in this case is a number). The downside is that if you want to use some CommaNumber method in you class typescript will complain. You could also define value with the any type so you can both use it in primitive operation and use any method, but in this case you'd loose type checking. There is an open issue on typescript github to allow wrapped values to work as primitives (Issue 2631), but until now (version 2.0.9) the issue is not implemented yet.

2.1. If you want you can also have you domain property instantiated right in the component (since 1.1.1):

	import { ValidateDomainDirective, UsesDomainValues, DomainProperty }
	from 'ng-domain-prop/ng-domain-prop';

	@Component({
		template: `<input validate-domain validate-domain
								[(ngMpodel)]='commaNumber' />`
	})
	@UsesDomainValues
	export class MyComponent{
		@DomainProperty(CommaNumber) commaNumber:any = 5;
	}
  1. Finnaly, if you want to use validation the input to be validated must have the 'validate-domain' directive:
	import { ValidateDomainDirective }
		from 'ng-domain-prop/ng-domain-prop';

	//myClass.value will be validated by the domain class.
	@Component({
		template: `<input validate-domain validate-domain
								[(ngMpodel)]='myClass.value' />`
	})
	export class MyComponent{
		private myClass:MyDomainClass;
	}

The validate-domain directive works by setting a custom validator on the input NgControl that calls the isValid() method on the model attribute (ngModel). So it also requires that you import the angular2 forms module in the module you want to use it:

import { FormsModule } from '@angular/forms';
...
@NgModule({
	imports: [
    BrowserModule,
  ...
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