Angular 2 Busy can show busy/loading indicators on any promise, or on any Observable's subscription.
Rewritten from angular-busy, and add some new features in terms of Angular 2.
devyumao.github.io/angular2-busy/demo/asset/
npm install --save angular2-busy
<link rel="stylesheet" href="/node_modules/angular2-busy/build/style/busy.css">
Import the BusyModule
in your root application module:
import {NgModule} from '@angular/core';
import {BrowserAnimationsModule} from '@angular/platform-browser/animations';
import {BusyModule} from 'angular2-busy';
@NgModule({
imports: [
// ...
BrowserAnimationsModule,
BusyModule
],
// ...
})
export class AppModule {}
Reference your promise in the ngBusy
directive:
import {Component, OnInit} from '@angular/core';
import {Http} from '@angular/http';
@Component({
selector: 'some',
template: `
<div [ngBusy]="busy"></div>
`
})
class SomeComponent implements OnInit {
busy: Promise<any>;
constructor(private http: Http) {}
ngOnInit() {
this.busy = this.http.get('...').toPromise();
}
}
Moreover, the subscription of an Observable is also supported:
// ...
import {Subscription} from 'rxjs';
// ...
class SomeComponent implements OnInit {
busy: Subscription;
// ...
ngOnInit() {
this.busy = this.http.get('...').subscribe();
}
}
The ngBusy
directive expects a busy thing, which means:
- A promise
- Or an Observable's subscription
- Or an array of them
- Or a configuration object
In other words, you may use flexible syntax:
<!-- Simple syntax -->
<div [ngBusy]="busy"></div>
<!-- Collection syntax -->
<div [ngBusy]="[busyA, busyB, busyC]"></div>
<!-- Advanced syntax -->
<div [ngBusy]="{busy: busy, message: 'Loading...', backdrop: false, delay: 200, minDuration: 600}"></div>
Option | Required | Default | Details |
---|---|---|---|
busy | Required | null | A busy thing (or an array of busy things) that will cause the loading indicator to show. |
message | Optional | 'Please wait...' | The message to show in the indicator which will reflect the updated values as they are changed. |
backdrop | Optional | true | A faded backdrop will be shown behind the indicator if true. |
template | Optional | A default template string | If provided, the custom template will be shown in place of the default indicatory template. The scope can be augmented with a {{message}} field containing the indicator message text. |
delay | Optional | 0 | The amount of time to wait until showing the indicator. Specified in milliseconds. |
minDuration | Optional | 0 | The amount of time to keep the indicator showing even if the busy thing was completed quicker. Specified in milliseconds. |
wrapperClass | Optional | 'ng-busy' | The name(s) of the CSS classes to be applied to the wrapper element of the indicator. |
The default values of options can be overriden by configuring the provider of the BusyModule
.
In the root application module, you can do this:
import {NgModule} from '@angular/core';
import {BusyModule, BusyConfig} from 'angular2-busy';
@NgModule({
imports: [
// ...
BusyModule.forRoot(
new BusyConfig({
message: 'Don\'t panic!',
backdrop: false,
template: '<div>{{message}}</div>',
delay: 200,
minDuration: 600,
wrapperClass: 'my-class'
})
)
],
// ...
})
export class AppModule
You may add position: relative
style to your ngBusy
container.
You may need this in your systemjs.config.js
:
{
paths: {
'npm:': 'node_modules/'
},
map: {
// ...
'angular2-busy': 'npm:angular2-busy'
},
packages: {
// ...
'angular2-busy': {
main: './index.js',
defaultExtension: 'js'
}
}
}
-
Provide custom animations for the indicator
-
Unit & E2E test
Rewritten from cgross's angular-busy.
Inspired by ajoslin's angular-promise-tracker.
This project is licensed under the MIT license. See the LICENSE file for more info.