angular-eslint
transloco
angular-eslint | transloco | |
---|---|---|
22 | 15 | |
1,563 | 1,935 | |
0.6% | 1.0% | |
9.4 | 9.0 | |
5 days ago | 5 days ago | |
TypeScript | TypeScript | |
MIT License | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
angular-eslint
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Lint rule for self-closing tags in Angular
Until I recently discovered that angular-eslint had added a new lint rule in v16.2 called prefer-self-closing-tags that can be used to enforce this syntax partially or throughout a project.
- How to create service call to get users
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Angular 16 Unveiled: Discover the Top 7 Features
We are also using angular-eslint which now supports 16.0.3 so that was painless.
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Angular Universal SSR ESLint rules?
Along the lines of Angular ESLint, are there any packages that provide ESLint rules around writing SSR friendly code?
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npx storybook init does not work properly? It installs react and react-dom, also the components are full of errors?! Am I doing something wrong?
{ "root": true, "ignorePatterns": ["projects/**/*"], "rules": { "prettier/prettier": [ "error", { "endOfLine": "auto" } ] }, "overrides": [ { // TODO: find a way to apply rules on all files ending with .ts except for files ending with .stories.ts "files": ["*.ts"], "extends": [ "eslint:recommended", "plugin:@typescript-eslint/recommended", "plugin:@angular-eslint/recommended", "plugin:@angular-eslint/template/process-inline-templates", "plugin:prettier/recommended" ], "rules": { // https://github.com/angular-eslint/angular-eslint/tree/main/packages/eslint-plugin/docs/rules "@angular-eslint/directive-selector": [ "error", { "type": "attribute", "prefix": "hv", "style": "camelCase" } ], "@angular-eslint/component-selector": [ "error", { "type": "element", "prefix": "hv", "style": "kebab-case" } ], // https://github.com/typescript-eslint/typescript-eslint/tree/main/packages/eslint-plugin/docs/rules "@typescript-eslint/member-ordering": "error", "@typescript-eslint/naming-convention": "error", // https://eslint.org/docs/latest/rules/ "default-case": "error", "default-case-last": "error" } }, { "files": ["*.html"], "extends": [ "plugin:@angular-eslint/template/recommended", "plugin:prettier/recommended" ], "rules": { // https://github.com/angular-eslint/angular-eslint/tree/main/packages/eslint-plugin-template/docs/rules "@angular-eslint/template/no-duplicate-attributes": ["error"], "@angular-eslint/template/attributes-order": ["error"], "@angular-eslint/template/no-call-expression": [ "error" ], "@angular-eslint/template/accessibility-elements-content": [ "error", { "allowList": [ "ariaLabel" ] } ], "@angular-eslint/template/accessibility-valid-aria": [ "error" ] } }, { "files": ["*.stories.@(ts|mjs|cjs)"], "extends": ["plugin:storybook/recommended"] // https://github.com/storybookjs/eslint-plugin-storybook/tree/main/docs/rules // "rules": {} } ] }
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Personal Angular Best Practices
I don't think it's crazy, but these things improved my code quality a lot: * Use Prettier, an opinionated code formatter. It formats your code, no configuration, no fights with your colleagues. * Use eslint and SonarLint. They help you find bugs before you even commit your code. * Try to achieve a very high code coverage. Not every line needs to be covered, but I personally feel better if I've got 90+% coverage. It's not that hard once you include it in your coding-DNA. * Setup your IDE to properly debug your code. Don't do console.log(), use debugger; statements or real conditional breakpoints. Nothing sucks more than not being able to find out what your code really does. * Learn the ES6 and later features. Many developers tend to code in old ways (as they are used to), but JavaScript can do so much more these days. You'll save a lot of time and effort applying these new features. Start with Arrow Functions, followed by Rest and Spread operator, Property Shorthand and * Destructuring . Also note that there are some awesome new datastructures like Map and Set. * Learn TypeScript and keep yourself up to date. There are so many anti-patterns (never ever use any) that degregate your fancy, strictly typed highlevel code to buggy ES-code. It also helps a lot to reduce DRY and boilerplate. * Learn rxjs and use it on a daily base. Angular itself is really reactive as most Angular services return Observables that can be further processed with rxjs. Once your mind made the switch, you won't really use regular Events and/or loops anymore. But be aware of how to properly test your rxjs pipelines. * If you are integrating a remote API, I have very good experiences with OpenAPI and it's code generator for Angular. You will get ready-to-use interfaces and services just from an OpenAPI specification (which you get as a gift for many of the modern backend frameworks). Saves a lot of time and boilerplate code and removes the need to test and debug API-layer code. Your build will break as soon as the API introduces a breaking change, which is exactly what you want (it's too late if your app breaks on production)
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Angular ESLint Rules for Keyboard Accessibility
If you're not already using Angular ESLint, you can add it to an Angular project by running the schematic:
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Adding the ESLint to an Angular application
ng add @angular-eslint/schematics βΉ Using package manager: npm β Found compatible package version: @angular-eslint/[email protected]. β Package information loaded. The package @angular-eslint/[email protected] will be installed and executed. Would you like to proceed? Yes β Packages successfully installed. All @angular-eslint dependencies have been successfully installed π Please see https://github.com/angular-eslint/angular-eslint for how to add ESLint configuration to your project. We detected that you have a single project in your workspace and no existing linter wired up, so we are configuring ESLint for you automatically. Please see https://github.com/angular-eslint/angular-eslint for more information. CREATE .eslintrc.json (984 bytes) UPDATE package.json (1511 bytes) UPDATE angular.json (3447 bytes) β Packages installed successfully.
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Getting started with Husky and Lint-staged for pre-commit hooks
We need two tools to get the job done. The first tool that we need is a pre-commit tool that runs for every git-commit action: Husky. The second tool that is needed is lint-staged, which will run specified scripts on matching staged files. Aside from these tools, we need a code repository with actual linting tools. We will be using an Angular project as an example with the Angular ESLint and Prettier pre-configured.
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Angular: Migrate from TSLint to ESLint
You can find all necessary tools and information to simplify the migration of existing Angular projects to ESLint at the GitHub Repo Angular ESLint.
transloco
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Coping with i18n
Some libraries support ways to handle missing translations (e.g., TranslocoMissingHandler from Transloco or MissingTranslationHandler from ngx-translate). So that's a way to find out any missing translations, but that's quite manual because you have to go over every part of the served application.
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Internationalization best practices for front-end developers
For Svelte.. not sure if there's a best package.
[0] https://github.com/ngneat/transloco
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Episode 23/23: Hydration in Angular, Angular Community Meetup
Transloco 4.3: ChangeLog
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Angular 16 Unveiled: Discover the Top 7 Features
We migrated from ngx-translate to Transloco ~2 years ago and it was quite painless. They have nice migration section for ngx-translate
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Is the official angular/@localize i18n lib really the go to for localization?
You can take a look at Transloco. We use it all our projects.
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Translate or Localize for a new web project
I find Transloco a lot easier to work with compared to lokalize: https://ngneat.github.io/transloco/
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is it possible to serve locales based on browser language setting?
I'd recommend https://ngneat.github.io/transloco/
- Ng-News: Issue 22/12
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How to use Angulars i18n in ongoing development?
There are a lot of tools available, but many depend on your budget. I personally enjoy Transloco.
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Internationalization file maintenance for lazy loaded modules - Built in module
ngx-translate is in maintenance mode and won't be develop any further (see https://github.com/ngx-translate/core/issues/783). I would highly recommend to use Transloco instead (https://ngneat.github.io/transloco/). It has same functionality as ngx-translate. Last time I checked ngx-translate doesn't actually lazyLoad translations properly but Transloco does.
What are some alternatives?
typescript-eslint - :sparkles: Monorepo for all the tooling which enables ESLint to support TypeScript
ngx-translate-messageformat-compiler - Advanced pluralization (and more) for ngx-translate, using standard ICU syntax which is compiled with the help of messageformat.js.
rushstack - Monorepo for tools developed by the Rush Stack community
react-i18next - Internationalization for react done right. Using the i18next i18n ecosystem.
mockoon - Mockoon is the easiest and quickest way to run mock APIs locally. No remote deployment, no account required, open source.
i18next - i18next: learn once - translate everywhere
angular-eslint - Application example built with Angular 14 and adding the ESLint using @angular-eslint/schematics library.
angular-i18n-example - Angular internationalization example with @angular/localize
prettier - Prettier is an opinionated code formatter.
core - The internationalization (i18n) library for Angular
eslint-plugin-storybook - πOfficial ESLint plugin for Storybook
Angular - Deliver web apps with confidence π