A bridge that configures Breeze to work with Angular out of the box.
This is the updated bridge using the new HttpClient service and is recommended for Angular 4.3 and up. The older bridge using the deprecated Http service can be found here.
Support for rxjs 6 (backwards compatible with rxjs 5.5 and higher)
Dropped beta label
Initial beta release
- Breeze client npm package 1.6.3 or higher
- Angular 4.3.0 or higher
-
Install breeze-client
npm install breeze-client --save
-
Install breeze-bridge2-angular
npm install breeze-bridge2-angular --save
A comprehensive example app that makes use of the bridge can be found here: https://github.com/Breeze/temphire.angular.
To use the bridge in your own application, the following steps are required.
Import BreezeBridgeHttpClientModule
and HttpClientModule
and add it to the app module's imports.
import { BreezeBridgeHttpClientModule } from 'breeze-bridge2-angular';
import { HttpClientModule } from '@angular/common/http';
@NgModule({
imports: [
BreezeBridgeHttpClientModule,
HttpClientModule
],
bootstrap: [ AppComponent ]
})
export class AppModule { }
Now we can use Breeze normally from something like a data service for example.
import { Injectable } from '@angular/core';
import { EntityManager, EntityQuery } from 'breeze-client';
import { Customer } from './entities';
@Injectable()
export class DataService {
private _em: EntityManager;
constructor() {
this._em = new EntityManager();
}
getAllCustomers(): Promise<Customer[]> {
let query = EntityQuery.from('Customers').orderBy('companyName');
return this._em.executeQuery(query)
.then(res => res.results)
.catch((error) => {
console.log(error);
return Promise.reject(error);
});
}
}