Enums let you avoid using strings and having to remember what string values you used. They also allow you to lock down the values a property can be, so that a user can't just submit any value they want. So if you aren't using them, start using them, and if you are already using them, use them more, use them to a fault.
To compare enums, use dot notation to get the value for a specific enum property and compare it to another value, e.g. if (MyEnum. Small < 2) {} . The values for numeric enums, without provided initial value, are auto-incrementing integers, starting at 0 .
In TypeScript, enums, or enumerated types, are data structures of constant length that hold a set of constant values. Each of these constant values is known as a member of the enum. Enums are useful when setting properties or values that can only be a certain number of possible values.
An enum is usually selected specifically because it is immutable - i.e. you would never want the values to change as it would make your application unpredictable.
You can create a reference to the enum in your component class (I just changed the initial character to be lower-case) and then use that reference from the template (plunker):
import {Component} from 'angular2/core';
enum CellType {Text, Placeholder}
class Cell {
constructor(public text: string, public type: CellType) {}
}
@Component({
selector: 'my-app',
template: `
<div [ngSwitch]="cell.type">
<div *ngSwitchCase="cellType.Text">
{{cell.text}}
</div>
<div *ngSwitchCase="cellType.Placeholder">
Placeholder
</div>
</div>
<button (click)="setType(cellType.Text)">Text</button>
<button (click)="setType(cellType.Placeholder)">Placeholder</button>
`,
})
export default class AppComponent {
// Store a reference to the enum
cellType = CellType;
public cell: Cell;
constructor() {
this.cell = new Cell("Hello", CellType.Text)
}
setType(type: CellType) {
this.cell.type = type;
}
}
You can create a custom decorator to add to your component to make it aware of enums.
export enum MyEnum {
FirstValue,
SecondValue
}
import { MyEnum } from './myenum.enum';
export function MyEnumAware(constructor: Function) {
constructor.prototype.MyEnum = MyEnum;
}
import { Component } from '@angular2/core';
import { MyEnum } from './myenum.enum';
import { MyEnumAware } from './myenumaware.decorator';
@Component({
selector: 'enum-aware',
template: `
<div [ngSwitch]="myEnumValue">
<div *ngSwitchCase="MyEnum.FirstValue">
First Value
</div>
<div *ngSwitchCase="MyEnum.SecondValue">
Second Value
</div>
</div>
<button (click)="toggleValue()">Toggle Value</button>
`,
})
@MyEnumAware // <---------------!!!
export default class EnumAwareComponent {
myEnumValue: MyEnum = MyEnum.FirstValue;
toggleValue() {
this.myEnumValue = this.myEnumValue === MyEnum.FirstValue
? MyEnum.SecondValue : MyEnum.FirstValue;
}
}
This's simple and works like a charm :) just declare your enum like this and you can use it on HTML template
statusEnum: typeof StatusEnum = StatusEnum;
Angular4 - Using Enum in HTML Template ngSwitch / ngSwitchCase
Solution here: https://stackoverflow.com/a/42464835/802196
credit: @snorkpete
In your component, you have
enum MyEnum{
First,
Second
}
Then in your component, you bring in the Enum type via a member 'MyEnum', and create another member for your enum variable 'myEnumVar' :
export class MyComponent{
MyEnum = MyEnum;
myEnumVar:MyEnum = MyEnum.Second
...
}
You can now use myEnumVar and MyEnum in your .html template. Eg, Using Enums in ngSwitch:
<div [ngSwitch]="myEnumVar">
<div *ngSwitchCase="MyEnum.First"><app-first-component></app-first-component></div>
<div *ngSwitchCase="MyEnum.Second"><app-second-component></app-second-component></div>
<div *ngSwitchDefault>MyEnumVar {{myEnumVar}} is not handled.</div>
</div>
as of rc.6 / final
...
export enum AdnetNetworkPropSelector {
CONTENT,
PACKAGE,
RESOURCE
}
<div style="height: 100%">
<div [ngSwitch]="propSelector">
<div *ngSwitchCase="adnetNetworkPropSelector.CONTENT">
<AdnetNetworkPackageContentProps [setAdnetContentModels]="adnetNetworkPackageContent.selectedAdnetContentModel">
</AdnetNetworkPackageContentProps>
</div>
<div *ngSwitchCase="adnetNetworkPropSelector.PACKAGE">
</div>
</div>
</div>
export class AdnetNetwork {
private adnetNetworkPropSelector = AdnetNetworkPropSelector;
private propSelector = AdnetNetworkPropSelector.CONTENT;
}
As an alternative to @Eric Lease's decorator, which unfortunately doesn't work using --aot
(and thus --prod
) builds, I resorted to using a service which exposes all my application's enums. Just need to publicly inject that into each component which requires it, under an easy name, after which you can access the enums in your views. E.g.:
Service
import { Injectable } from '@angular/core';
import { MyEnumType } from './app.enums';
@Injectable()
export class EnumsService {
MyEnumType = MyEnumType;
// ...
}
Don't forget to include it in your module's provider list.
Component class
export class MyComponent {
constructor(public enums: EnumsService) {}
@Input() public someProperty: MyEnumType;
// ...
}
Component html
<div *ngIf="someProperty === enums.MyEnumType.SomeValue">Match!</div>
I have no problem referring to enums directly in HTML, but in some cases there are cleaner alternatives that don't lose type-safe-ness. For instance if you choose the approach shown in my other answer, you may have declared TT in your component something like this:
public TT =
{
// Enum defines (Horizontal | Vertical)
FeatureBoxResponsiveLayout: FeatureBoxResponsiveLayout
}
To show a different layout in your HTML, you'd have an *ngIf
for each layout type, and you could refer directly to the enum in your component's HTML:
*ngIf="(featureBoxResponsiveService.layout | async) == TT.FeatureBoxResponsiveLayout.Horizontal"
This example uses a service to get the current layout, runs it through the async pipe and then compares it to our enum value. It's pretty verbose, convoluted and not much fun to look at. It also exposes the name of the enum, which itself may be overly verbose.
Alternatively you can do the following, and declare a more readable function in your component's .ts file :
*ngIf="isResponsiveLayout('Horizontal')"
Much cleaner! But what if someone types in 'Horziontal'
by mistake? The whole reason you wanted to use an enum in the HTML was to be typesafe right?
We can still achieve that with keyof and some typescript magic. This is the definition of the function:
isResponsiveLayout(value: keyof typeof FeatureBoxResponsiveLayout)
{
return FeatureBoxResponsiveLayout[value] == this.featureBoxResponsiveService.layout.value;
}
Note the usage of FeatureBoxResponsiveLayout[string]
which converts the string value passed in to the numeric value of the enum.
This will give an error message with an AOT compilation if you use an invalid value.
Argument of type '"H4orizontal"' is not assignable to parameter of type '"Vertical" | "Horizontal"
Currently VSCode isn't smart enough to underline H4orizontal
in the HTML editor, but you'll get the warning at compile time (with --prod build or --aot switch). This also may be improved upon in a future update.
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