Opinionated AngularJS styleguide for teams by @toddmotto
A standardised approach for developing AngularJS applications in teams. This styleguide touches on concepts, syntax, conventions and is based on my experience writing about, talking about, and building Angular applications.
John Papa and I have discussed in-depth styling patterns for Angular and as such have both released separate styleguides. Thanks to those discussions, I've learned some great tips from John that have helped shape this guide. We've both created our own take on a styleguide. I urge you to check his out to compare thoughts.
See the original article that sparked this off
- Modules
- Controllers
- Services and Factory
- Directives
- Filters
- Routing resolves
- Publish and subscribe events
- Performance
- Angular wrapper references
- Comment standards
- Minification and annotation
-
Definitions: Declare modules without a variable using the setter and getter syntax
// avoid var app = angular.module('app', []); app.controller(); app.factory(); // recommended angular .module('app', []) .controller() .factory();
-
Note: Using
angular.module('app', []);
sets a module, whereasangular.module('app');
gets the module. Only set once and get for all other instances. -
Methods: Pass functions into module methods rather than assign as a callback
// avoid angular .module('app', []) .controller('MainCtrl', function MainCtrl () { }) .service('SomeService', function SomeService () { }); // recommended function MainCtrl () { } function SomeService () { } angular .module('app', []) .controller('MainCtrl', MainCtrl) .service('SomeService', SomeService);
-
This aids with readability and reduces the volume of code "wrapped" inside the Angular framework
-
IIFE scoping: To avoid polluting the global scope with our function declarations that get passed into Angular, ensure build tasks wrap the concatenated files inside an IIFE
(function () { angular .module('app', []); // MainCtrl.js function MainCtrl () { } angular .module('app') .controller('MainCtrl', MainCtrl); // SomeService.js function SomeService () { } angular .module('app') .service('SomeService', SomeService); // ... })();
-
controllerAs syntax: Controllers are classes, so use the
controllerAs
syntax at all times<!-- avoid --> <div ng-controller="MainCtrl"> {{ someObject }} </div> <!-- recommended --> <div ng-controller="MainCtrl as vm"> {{ vm.someObject }} </div>
-
In the DOM we get a variable per controller, which aids nested controller methods, avoiding any
$parent
calls -
The
controllerAs
syntax usesthis
inside controllers, which gets bound to$scope
// avoid function MainCtrl ($scope) { $scope.someObject = {}; $scope.doSomething = function () { }; } // recommended function MainCtrl () { this.someObject = {}; this.doSomething = function () { }; }
-
Only use
$scope
incontrollerAs
when necessary; for example, publishing and subscribing events using$emit
,$broadcast
,$on
or$watch
. Try to limit the use of these, however, and treat$scope
as a special use case -
Inheritance: Use prototypal inheritance when extending controller classes
function BaseCtrl () { this.doSomething = function () { }; } BaseCtrl.prototype.someObject = {}; BaseCtrl.prototype.sharedSomething = function () { }; AnotherCtrl.prototype = Object.create(BaseCtrl.prototype); function AnotherCtrl () { this.anotherSomething = function () { }; }
-
Use
Object.create
with a polyfill for browser support -
controllerAs 'vm': Capture the
this
context of the Controller usingvm
, standing forViewModel
// avoid function MainCtrl () { this.doSomething = function () { }; } // recommended function MainCtrl (SomeService) { var vm = this; vm.doSomething = SomeService.doSomething; }
Why? : Function context changes the
this
value, use it to avoid.bind()
calls and scoping issues -
Presentational logic only (MVVM): Presentational logic only inside a controller, avoid Business logic (delegate to Services)
// avoid function MainCtrl () { var vm = this; $http .get('/users') .success(function (response) { vm.users = response; }); vm.removeUser = function (user, index) { $http .delete('/user/' + user.id) .then(function (response) { vm.users.splice(index, 1); }); }; } // recommended function MainCtrl (UserService) { var vm = this; UserService .getUsers() .then(function (response) { vm.users = response; }); vm.removeUser = function (user, index) { UserService .removeUser(user) .then(function (response) { vm.users.splice(index, 1); }); }; }
Why? : Controllers should fetch Model data from Services, avoiding any Business logic. Controllers should act as a ViewModel and control the data flowing between the Model and the View presentational layer. Business logic in Controllers makes testing Services impossible.
- All Angular Services are singletons, using
.service()
or.factory()
differs the way Objects are created.
Services: act as a constructor
function and are instantiated with the new
keyword. Use this
for public methods and variables
```javascript
function SomeService () {
this.someMethod = function () {
};
}
angular
.module('app')
.service('SomeService', SomeService);
```
Factory: Business logic or provider modules, return an Object or closure
-
Always return a host Object instead of the revealing Module pattern due to the way Object references are bound and updated
function AnotherService () { var AnotherService = {}; AnotherService.someValue = ''; AnotherService.someMethod = function () { }; return AnotherService; } angular .module('app') .factory('AnotherService', AnotherService);
Why? : Primitive values cannot update alone using the revealing module pattern
-
Declaration restrictions: Only use
custom element
andcustom attribute
methods for declaring your Directives ({ restrict: 'EA' }
) depending on the Directive's role<!-- avoid --> <!-- directive: my-directive --> <div class="my-directive"></div> <!-- recommended --> <my-directive></my-directive> <div my-directive></div>
-
Comment and class name declarations are confusing and should be avoided. Comments do not play nicely with older versions of IE. Using an attribute is the safest method for browser coverage.
-
Templating: Use
Array.join('')
for clean templating// avoid function someDirective () { return { template: '<div class="some-directive">' + '<h1>My directive</h1>' + '</div>' }; } // recommended function someDirective () { return { template: [ '<div class="some-directive">', '<h1>My directive</h1>', '</div>' ].join('') }; }
Why? : Improves readability as code can be indented properly, it also avoids the
+
operator which is less clean and can lead to errors if used incorrectly to split lines -
DOM manipulation: Takes place only inside Directives, never a controller/service
// avoid function UploadCtrl () { $('.dragzone').on('dragend', function () { // handle drop functionality }); } angular .module('app') .controller('UploadCtrl', UploadCtrl); // recommended function dragUpload () { return { restrict: 'EA', link: function (scope, element, attrs) { element.on('dragend', function () { // handle drop functionality }); } }; } angular .module('app') .directive('dragUpload', dragUpload);
-
Naming conventions: Never
ng-*
prefix custom directives, they might conflict future native directives// avoid // <div ng-upload></div> function ngUpload () { return {}; } angular .module('app') .directive('ngUpload', ngUpload); // recommended // <div drag-upload></div> function dragUpload () { return {}; } angular .module('app') .directive('dragUpload', dragUpload);
-
Directives and Filters are the only providers that have the first letter as lowercase; this is due to strict naming conventions in Directives. Angular hyphenates
camelCase
, sodragUpload
will become<div drag-upload></div>
when used on an element. -
controllerAs: Use the
controllerAs
syntax inside Directives as well// avoid function dragUpload () { return { controller: function ($scope) { } }; } angular .module('app') .directive('dragUpload', dragUpload); // recommended function dragUpload () { return { controllerAs: 'vm', controller: function () { } }; } angular .module('app') .directive('dragUpload', dragUpload);
-
Global filters: Create global filters using
angular.filter()
only. Never use local filters inside Controllers/Services// avoid function SomeCtrl () { this.startsWithLetterA = function (items) { return items.filter(function (item) { return /^a/i.test(item.name); }); }; } angular .module('app') .controller('SomeCtrl', SomeCtrl); // recommended function startsWithLetterA () { return function (items) { return items.filter(function (item) { return /^a/i.test(item.name); }); }; } angular .module('app') .filter('startsWithLetterA', startsWithLetterA);
-
This enhances testing and reusability
-
Promises: Resolve Controller dependencies in the
$routeProvider
(or$stateProvider
forui-router
), not the Controller itself// avoid function MainCtrl (SomeService) { var _this = this; // unresolved _this.something; // resolved asynchronously SomeService.doSomething().then(function (response) { _this.something = response; }); } angular .module('app') .controller('MainCtrl', MainCtrl); // recommended function config ($routeProvider) { $routeProvider .when('/', { templateUrl: 'views/main.html', resolve: { // resolve here } }); } angular .module('app') .config(config);
-
Controller.resolve property: Never bind logic to the router itself. Reference a
resolve
property for each Controller to couple the logic// avoid function MainCtrl (SomeService) { this.something = SomeService.something; } function config ($routeProvider) { $routeProvider .when('/', { templateUrl: 'views/main.html', controllerAs: 'vm', controller: 'MainCtrl' resolve: { doSomething: function () { return SomeService.doSomething(); } } }); } // recommended function MainCtrl (SomeService) { this.something = SomeService.something; } MainCtrl.resolve = { doSomething: function (SomeService) { return SomeService.doSomething(); } }; function config ($routeProvider) { $routeProvider .when('/', { templateUrl: 'views/main.html', controllerAs: 'vm', controller: 'MainCtrl' resolve: MainCtrl.resolve }); }
-
This keeps resolve dependencies inside the same file as the Controller and the router free from logic
-
$scope: Use the
$emit
and$broadcast
methods to trigger events to direct relationship scopes only// up the $scope $scope.$emit('customEvent', data); // down the $scope $scope.$broadcast('customEvent', data);
-
$rootScope: Use only
$emit
as an application-wide event bus and remember to unbind listeners// all $rootScope.$on listeners $rootScope.$emit('customEvent', data);
-
Hint: Because the
$rootScope
is never destroyed,$rootScope.$on
listeners aren't either, unlike$scope.$on
listeners and will always persist, so they need destroying when the relevant$scope
fires the$destroy
event// call the closure var unbind = $rootScope.$on('customEvent'[, callback]); $scope.$on('$destroy', unbind);
-
For multiple
$rootScope
listeners, use an Object literal and loop each one on the$destroy
event to unbind all automaticallyvar rootListeners = { 'customEvent1': $rootScope.$on('customEvent1'[, callback]), 'customEvent2': $rootScope.$on('customEvent2'[, callback]), 'customEvent3': $rootScope.$on('customEvent3'[, callback]) }; for (var unbind in rootListeners) { $scope.$on('$destroy', rootListeners[unbind]); }
-
One-time binding syntax: In newer versions of Angular (v1.3.0-beta.10+), use the one-time binding syntax
{{ ::value }}
where it makes sense// avoid <h1>{{ vm.title }}</h1> // recommended <h1>{{ ::vm.title }}</h1>
Why? : Binding once removes the watcher from the scope's
$$watchers
array after theundefined
variable becomes resolved, thus improving performance in each dirty-check -
Consider $scope.$digest: Use
$scope.$digest
over$scope.$apply
where it makes sense. Only child scopes will update$scope.$digest();
Why? :
$scope.$apply
will call$rootScope.$digest
, which causes the entire application$$watchers
to dirty-check again. Using$scope.$digest
will dirty check current and child scopes from the initiated$scope
-
$document and $window: Use
$document
and$window
at all times to aid testing and Angular references// avoid function dragUpload () { return { link: function ($scope, $element, $attrs) { document.addEventListener('click', function () { }); } }; } // recommended function dragUpload () { return { link: function ($scope, $element, $attrs, $document) { $document.addEventListener('click', function () { }); } }; }
-
$timeout and $interval: Use
$timeout
and$interval
over their native counterparts to keep Angular's two-way data binding up to date// avoid function dragUpload () { return { link: function ($scope, $element, $attrs) { setTimeout(function () { // }, 1000); } }; } // recommended function dragUpload ($timeout) { return { link: function ($scope, $element, $attrs) { $timeout(function () { // }, 1000); } }; }
-
jsDoc: Use jsDoc syntax to document function names, description, params and returns
/** * @name SomeService * @desc Main application Controller */ function SomeService (SomeService) { /** * @name doSomething * @desc Does something awesome * @param {Number} x - First number to do something with * @param {Number} y - Second number to do something with * @returns {Number} */ this.doSomething = function (x, y) { return x * y; }; } angular .module('app') .service('SomeService', SomeService);
-
ng-annotate: Use ng-annotate for Gulp as
ng-min
is deprecated, and comment functions that need automated dependency injection using/** @ngInject */
/** * @ngInject */ function MainCtrl (SomeService) { this.doSomething = SomeService.doSomething; } angular .module('app') .controller('MainCtrl', MainCtrl);
-
Which produces the following output with the
$inject
annotation/** * @ngInject */ function MainCtrl (SomeService) { this.doSomething = SomeService.doSomething; } MainCtrl.$inject = ['SomeService']; angular .module('app') .controller('MainCtrl', MainCtrl);
For anything else, including API reference, check the Angular documentation.
Open an issue first to discuss potential changes/additions.
Copyright (c) 2014 Todd Motto
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