Component templates are not always fixed. An application may need to load new components at runtime.
This cookbook shows you how to use ComponentFactoryResolver
to add components dynamically.
See the of the code in this cookbook.
The following example shows how to build a dynamic ad banner.
The hero agency is planning an ad campaign with several different ads cycling through the banner. New ad components are added frequently by several different teams. This makes it impractical to use a template with a static component structure.
Instead, you need a way to load a new component without a fixed reference to the component in the ad banner's template.
Angular comes with its own API for loading components dynamically.
Before you can add components you have to define an anchor point to tell Angular where to insert components.
The ad banner uses a helper directive called AdDirective
to mark valid insertion points in the template.
import { Directive, ViewContainerRef } from '@angular/core'; @Directive({ selector: '[adHost]', }) export class AdDirective { constructor(public viewContainerRef: ViewContainerRef) { } }
AdDirective
injects ViewContainerRef
to gain access to the view container of the element that will host the dynamically added component.
In the @Directive
decorator, notice the selector name, adHost
; that's what you use to apply the directive to the element. The next section shows you how.
Most of the ad banner implementation is in ad-banner.component.ts
. To keep things simple in this example, the HTML is in the @Component
decorator's template
property as a template string.
The <ng-template>
element is where you apply the directive you just made. To apply the AdDirective
, recall the selector from ad.directive.ts
, [adHost]
. Apply that to <ng-template>
without the square brackets. Now Angular knows where to dynamically load components.
template: ` <div class="ad-banner-example"> <h3>Advertisements</h3> <ng-template adHost></ng-template> </div> `
The <ng-template>
element is a good choice for dynamic components because it doesn't render any additional output.
Take a closer look at the methods in ad-banner.component.ts
.
AdBannerComponent
takes an array of AdItem
objects as input, which ultimately comes from AdService
. AdItem
objects specify the type of component to load and any data to bind to the component.AdService
returns the actual ads making up the ad campaign.
Passing an array of components to AdBannerComponent
allows for a dynamic list of ads without static elements in the template.
With its getAds()
method, AdBannerComponent
cycles through the array of AdItems
and loads a new component every 3 seconds by calling loadComponent()
.
export class AdBannerComponent implements OnInit, OnDestroy { @Input() ads: AdItem[]; currentAdIndex = -1; @ViewChild(AdDirective, {static: true}) adHost: AdDirective; interval: any; constructor(private componentFactoryResolver: ComponentFactoryResolver) { } ngOnInit() { this.loadComponent(); this.getAds(); } ngOnDestroy() { clearInterval(this.interval); } loadComponent() { this.currentAdIndex = (this.currentAdIndex + 1) % this.ads.length; const adItem = this.ads[this.currentAdIndex]; const componentFactory = this.componentFactoryResolver.resolveComponentFactory(adItem.component); const viewContainerRef = this.adHost.viewContainerRef; viewContainerRef.clear(); const componentRef = viewContainerRef.createComponent<AdComponent>(componentFactory); componentRef.instance.data = adItem.data; } getAds() { this.interval = setInterval(() => { this.loadComponent(); }, 3000); } }
The loadComponent()
method is doing a lot of the heavy lifting here. Take it step by step. First, it picks an ad.
How loadComponent() chooses an ad
The
loadComponent()
method chooses an ad using some math.First, it sets the
currentAdIndex
by taking whatever it currently is plus one, dividing that by the length of theAdItem
array, and using the remainder as the newcurrentAdIndex
value. Then, it uses that value to select anadItem
from the array.
After loadComponent()
selects an ad, it uses ComponentFactoryResolver
to resolve a ComponentFactory
for each specific component. The ComponentFactory
then creates an instance of each component.
Next, you're targeting the viewContainerRef
that exists on this specific instance of the component. How do you know it's this specific instance? Because it's referring to adHost
and adHost
is the directive you set up earlier to tell Angular where to insert dynamic components.
As you may recall, AdDirective
injects ViewContainerRef
into its constructor. This is how the directive accesses the element that you want to use to host the dynamic component.
To add the component to the template, you call createComponent()
on ViewContainerRef
.
The createComponent()
method returns a reference to the loaded component. Use that reference to interact with the component by assigning to its properties or calling its methods.
AdComponent
interfaceIn the ad banner, all components implement a common AdComponent
interface to standardize the API for passing data to the components.
Here are two sample components and the AdComponent
interface for reference:
import { Component, Input } from '@angular/core'; import { AdComponent } from './ad.component'; @Component({ template: ` <div class="job-ad"> <h4>{{data.headline}}</h4> {{data.body}} </div> ` }) export class HeroJobAdComponent implements AdComponent { @Input() data: any; }
import { Component, Input } from '@angular/core'; import { AdComponent } from './ad.component'; @Component({ template: ` <div class="hero-profile"> <h3>Featured Hero Profile</h3> <h4>{{data.name}}</h4> <p>{{data.bio}}</p> <strong>Hire this hero today!</strong> </div> ` }) export class HeroProfileComponent implements AdComponent { @Input() data: any; }
export interface AdComponent { data: any; }
The final ad banner looks like this:
See the .
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Licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution License 4.0.
https://v10.angular.io/guide/dynamic-component-loader