首页 > 其他 > 详细

[Angular 2] Understanding OpaqueToken

时间:2016-09-18 06:29:21      阅读:567      评论:0      收藏:0      [点我收藏+]

When using provider string tokens, there’s a chance they collide with other third-party tokens. Angular has with the concept of opaque tokens, that allow us to make whatever token we use unique, so we don’t run into collision problems. In this lesson we’ll explore how they work.

 

We created a value provide like this:
 providers: [
    TodoService,
    ConsoleService,
    TranslateService,
   ,{
        provide: LoggerProvider, useFactory: (cs, ts) => {
             return new LoggerProvider(cs, ts, true)
        },
        deps: [ConsoleService, TranslateService]
    } 
   ,{
        provide: apiUrl,
        useValue: ‘http://localhost:3000/api‘
    }
],

It turns out that this can be problematic in case we‘re using, for example, a third-party library that comes with its own provider that introduces the same token.

 

third-party.ts:

export const THIRD_PARTY_PRIVODERS = [
  {
      provide: apiUrl,
      useValue: ‘someurl‘
  }
]

 

So when you inject third-pary library into our app.ts:

 providers: [
    TodoService,
    ConsoleService,
    TranslateService,
   ,{
        provide: LoggerProvider, useFactory: (cs, ts) => {
             return new LoggerProvider(cs, ts, true)
        },
        deps: [ConsoleService, TranslateService]
    } 
   ,{
        provide: apiUrl,
        useValue: ‘http://localhost:3000/api‘
    }
   ,THIRD_PARTY_PROVIDERS
], 

Then it will rewrite our ‘apiUrl‘ because THIRD_PARTY_PROVIDERS comes behind apiUrl.

 

To solve this problem, Angular introduce OpaqueToken. 

app.tokens.ts:

import {OpaqueToken} from ‘@angular/core‘;

export const API_URL = new OpaqueToken(‘apiUrl‘)

Now ‘API_URL‘ is a class instance not just a string, class instance is always unique.

 

Then in app.ts:

import {API_URL} from ‘./app.tokens‘ 

providers: [
    TodoService,
    ConsoleService,
    TranslateService,
   ,{
        provide: LoggerProvider, useFactory: (cs, ts) => {
             return new LoggerProvider(cs, ts, true)
        },
        deps: [ConsoleService, TranslateService]
    } 
   ,{
        provide: API_URL,
        useValue: ‘http://localhost:3000/api‘
    }
   ,THIRD_PARTY_PROVIDERS
], 

In DataService:

import {LoggerProvider} from ‘./LoggerProvider‘;
import {Injectable} from ‘@angular/core‘;
import {Http} from ‘@angular/core‘;
import {Inject} from ‘@angular/core‘;
import {API_URL} from ‘./app.tokens‘;

@Injectable
export class TodoService{

    constructor(@Inject(API_URL) private apiUrl, private logger: LoggerProvider, private http: Http){ }

    getTodos(){
        this.logger.debug(‘Items‘, this.todos);
        return this.http.get(`${this.apiUrl}/todos`).map(res => res.json());
    }
}

Now we won‘t have conflict anymore.

 

As a general rule, always create opaque tokens when using string tokens for providers. For example:

third-party.ts:

import {OpaqueToken} from ‘@angular/core‘;

const API_URL = new OpaqueToken(‘apiUrl‘);
const CONFIG_URL = new OpaqueToken(‘configUrl‘);

export const THIRD_PARTY_PROVIDERS = [
  {
     provide: API_URL,
     useValue: ‘somevalue‘
  },
  {
     provide: CONFIG_URL,
     useValue: ‘somevalue‘
  }
]

 

[Angular 2] Understanding OpaqueToken

原文:http://www.cnblogs.com/Answer1215/p/5880257.html

(0)
(0)
   
举报
评论 一句话评论(0
关于我们 - 联系我们 - 留言反馈 - 联系我们:wmxa8@hotmail.com
© 2014 bubuko.com 版权所有
打开技术之扣,分享程序人生!