ng-sweetalert-service
v1.1.0
Published
Angular wrapper for SweetAlert2
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Angular wrapper for SweetAlert2
This is a simple wrapper to use SweetAlert in Angular projects, it works with angular-cli
also
Forked + Updated...
This project was forked from angular-sweetalert-service originally by Juan Manuel Alberro
i just Forked it, made a few changes (no global sweetalert) and packaged using ng-packagr.
This package is used internally as a stepping stone between the older version and switching to the Official SweetAlert2 Angular Integration... I would recommend using that if you are in a fresh project.
Install
npm install --save angular-sweetalert-service
or if you prefer Yarn
yarn add angular-sweetalert-service
Include in your app
In your app.module
just include the service
...
import { SweetAlertService } from 'angular-sweetalert-service';
...
Then add the service as a provider
@NgModule({
declarations: [
...
],
imports: [
...
],
providers: [
...
SweetAlertService,
...
],
bootstrap: [
...
]
})
Now you have the service available across the application. Now you need to call the service in your component and that's it.
// myComponent.ts
...
import { SweetAlertService } from 'angular-sweetalert';
@Component({
selector: 'app-foobar',
styles: [],
templateUrl: './foobar.html'
})
export class MyDummyClass {
constructor(
private alertService: SweetAlertService
) {}
...
Available methods
SweetAlert.confirm
SweetAlert.prompt
SweetAlert.alert
SweetAlert.question
SweetAlert.success
SweetAlert.warning
SweetAlert.error
You can extend the default options by just passing a configuration object into the method, like this:
const options = {
title: 'Are you sure?',
text: "You won't be able to revert this!",
type: 'warning',
showCancelButton: true,
confirmButtonColor: '#3085d6',
cancelButtonColor: '#d33',
confirmButtonText: 'Yes, delete it!'
};
SweetAlert.confirm(options);
Chaining & Promises
this.alertService.confirm({
title: 'Delete account?'
})
.then(() => {
this.alertService.success({
title: 'Account deleted'
});
})
.catch(() => console.log('canceled'));
Typescript
If you use Typescript, if you don't use it you should, you can access the types since the service has the d.ts
file available.
export declare class SweetAlertService {
constructor();
swal(): any;
confirm(options: any): any;
prompt(options: any): any;
alert(options: any): any;
question(options: any): any;
success(options: any): any;
warning(options: any): any;
error(options: any): any;
info(options: any): any;
}