Bootstrapping ng-upgrade
- Use manual Angular 1.x bootstrapping, and remove
ng-app
/ng-strict-di
references if they exist - Add Angular 2 dependencies
- Add the upgrade adapter
import {UpgradeAdapter} from '@angular/upgrade'
- Call the upgrade adapter's bootstrap
Once this is working the foundation is set for transitioning from Angular 1.x to Angular 2. It is important to note that the upgrade adapter's bootstrap mechanism is asynchronous. Additionally it's important to treat the upgrade adapter as a singleton.
The following file creates an instance of UpgradeAdapter
and exports it.
// Angular 2 Vendor Import
import {UpgradeAdapter} from '@angular/upgrade';
// Instantiate an adapter
export const upgradeAdapter = new UpgradeAdapter();
The following file bootstraps an Angular 1/2 hybrid application:
// Angular 1 Vendor Import
import * as angular from 'angular';
// Import the upgradeAdapter singleton
import {upgradeAdapter} from './upgrade-adapter';
// Name the application
const APPNAME = 'angular-upgrade-example';
// Register classic Angular 1 modules
angular
.module(APPNAME, []);
// Bootstrap Angular 1 manually
angular.bootstrap(document.body, [APPNAME]);
// Bootstrap Angular 2 - *note* this is asynchronous
upgradeAdapter.bootstrap(document.documentElement, [APPNAME], {strictDi: true});
The above example does not actually do anything other than bootstrap an empty application.
Upgrading/Downgrading Components
Once bootstrapping is complete, Angular 1.x components can be upgraded to work with Angular 2. Conversely, Angular 2 components can be downgraded to work with Angular 1.x.