Declare a component with generic type

倾然丶 夕夏残阳落幕 提交于 2019-12-03 09:38:57

You can also access the Type parameter through the ViewChild like this:

export class Bazz {
  name: string;

  constructor(name: string) {
    this.name = name;   
  }
}

@Component({
  selector: 'app-foo',
  template: `<div>{{bazz?.name}}</div>`,
  exportAs: 'appFoo'
})
export class FooComponent<T> {
  constructor() {}
  private _bazz: T;

  set bazz(b: T) {
    this._bazz = b;
  }

  get bazz(): T {
   return this._bazz;
  }
}

@Component({
  selector: 'app-bar',
  template: `<app-foo #appFoo></app-foo>`,
  styleUrls: ['./foo.component.scss'],
})
export class BarComponent<T> implements OnInit {
  @ViewChild('appFoo') appFoo: FooComponent<Bazz>;

  constructor() {}

  ngOnInit() {
    this.appFoo.bazz = new Bazz('bizzle');
    console.log(this.appFoo.bazz);
  }
}
Sasxa

You can declare it, but cannot use it directly. You can do something like this:

export abstract class Form<T> implements OnInit, OnChanges {
  someMethod() { throw 'Dont use directly' }
  otherMethod() { return 'Works!'; }
  // Note that below will cause compilation error
  //   TypeError: Object prototype may only be an Object or null: undefined
  // You cannot use protected in this usecase
  protected anotherMethod() { }
}

@Component({})
export class ModelOneForm extends Form<ModelOne> {
  someMethod() { return this.otherMethod(); }
}

You can consider this way. Create an interface for the data such as following:

interface ListItem {
  info: string;
  ...
}

Transform the data that you want to list to comply with the interface and thus can be interpreted by the ListDataComponent. Your ListDataComponent can then list the data according to the properties in the interface.

import { Component, OnInit, Input } from '@angular/core';

@Component({
  selector: 'data-list',
  templateUrl: './data-list.component.html',
  styleUrls: ['./data-list.component.scss']
})
export class DataListComponent implements OnInit {
    @Input() public items: ListItem[];

    constructor() {
    }

    ngOnInit() {
    }
}

I would recommend creating a parent list component with multiple child components for each type of data displayed, then use [ngSwitch] and *ngSwitchCase to determine what to display.

@Component({
  selector: 'app-list',
  template: `
    <ng-container *ngFor="let item in list$ | async" [ngSwitch]="item.type">
      <app-list-item-one [item]="item" *ngSwitchCase="listItemType.One"></app-list-item-one>
      <app-list-item-two [item]="item" *ngSwitchCase="listItemType.Two"></app-list-item-two>
    </ng-container>
  `
})
export class ListComponent extends OnInit {
  list$: Observable<ListItem[]>

  constructor(
    private listApi: ListApiService
  ) { }

  ngOnInit() {
    this.list$ = this.listApi.getList(...)
  }
}

@Component({
  selector: 'app-list-item-one',
  template: `
    {{ item.aProperty }}
  `
})
export class ListItemOneComponent {
  @Input() item: ListItemOne
}

@Component({
  selector: 'app-list-item-two',
  template: `
    {{ item.bProperty }}
  `
})
export class ListItemTwoComponent {
  @Input() item: ListItemTwo
}

export class ListItem {
  id: string
}

export class ListItemOne {
  aProperty: string
}

export class ListItemTwo {
  bProperty: string
}

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