@ngstack/electron
v0.2.2
Published
Angular library that provides integration with Electron
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@ngstack/electron
Angular library that provides integration with Electron.
Installing
npm install @ngstack/electron
Then import the ElectronModule
into your application
import { ElectronModule } from '@ngstack/electron';
@NgModule({
imports: [
...,
ElectronModule
],
declarations: [...],
providers: [...],
bootstrap: [AppComponent]
})
export class AppModule {}
Features
Electron Service
- detects when application is running with Electron
- provides access to
IpcRenderer
and cross-process communication - runs channel listeners within
NgZone
- does not affect the traditional Web applications
Properties
| Name | Type | Description | | ------------ | ------- | ----------------------------------------------------------- | | isDesktopApp | boolean | Detect whether service is running in a packaged desktop app | | isWebApp | boolean | Detect whether service is running in a traditional browser |
Listening to messages
Inject the ElectronService
instance into your component and use ElectronService.on
method:
@Component({...})
export class AppComponent implements OnInit {
constructor(private router: Router,
private electron: ElectronService) {
}
ngOnInit() {
this.electron.on('app:navigateRoute', (event: any, ...args: string[]) => {
this.router.navigate([...args]);
});
}
}
Example above setups an app:navigateRoute
channel listener,
and uses Router
to navigate to the requested route automatically.
Now, in the Electron application shell you can request navigation like in the following example:
BrowserWindow.getFocusedWindow().webContents.send(
'app:navigateRoute',
'/about'
);
Note that the ElectronService.on
method has no effect in the traditional Web apps,
but you can still use it to have source code compatibility with the packaged scenarios.
Sending messages
Inject the ElectronService
instance into your component and use ElectronService.send
method:
@Component({...})
export class AppComponent {
constructor(private electron: ElectronService) {}
onButtonClicked(event: any, parameter: string) {
this.electron.send('app:doSomething', parameter);
}
}
Now, in the Electron application shell you can request navigation like in the following example:
ipcMain.on('app:doSomething', (event, parameter) => {
// your custom code with optional access to parameter passed from the web app
});
Note that the ElectronService.send
method has no effect in the traditional Web apps,
but you can still use it to have source code compatibility with the packaged scenarios.