2015년 2월 3일 화요일

A weekly newsletter highlighting everything AngularJS


Welcome to another week of ng-newsletter. This week we're featuring some content that mostly helps you re-think the architecture of Angular applications. Flux, popularized by Facebook along with it's use of React can teach us even more about how to organize and reason about our code.

HOW TO MODERNIZE YOUR TECHNOLOGY AND NOT GO OUT OF BUSINESS

by @rangleio
Starting off this week, the fantastic rangle.io is covering a super interesting topic that we get asked constantly: how to stay above water and keep modernized at the same time with constant change in frameworks. Join us at their webinar tomorrow at 12:30pm EST
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Achieving Reasonable and Scalable Routing in AngularJS with Flux

by @gilbox
Routing is and can be a very frustrating part of developing single-page apps. Does it have to be? With a little more set-up, the ability to look at something and immediately be able to understand what it does is a big win for many.
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Organise your work inside VivifyScrum, free agile project management tool developed as a real time SPA using AngularJS. (https://www.vivifyscrum.com)

Song Flux | Elegantly Fluxing the Angular Way

by @DavidSouther
Flux is an approach to building large GUI applications popularized by Facebook’s React library. Characterized by enforcing a single data flow, flux guarantees certain behaviors and patterns when data moves through an application. These guarantees make it easier to reason about code, making applications and their modules more reliable, composable, and scalable. Song Flux is the Flux library adapted for use in Angular JS projects.
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Building a self-learning game with ArangoDB, io.js/NodeJS & AngularJS in half a day.

by @ArangoDB
Looking for a more full-stack application with Angular? This is it. It uses io.js, a fork of Node and delves into a framework that helps enforce microservices architecture with ArrangoDB and the Foxx framework.
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Animate Your Angular Application

BY @SFIORITTO
When an Angular app refreshes the DOM, the default experience is jarring because Angular dumps the elements into the view with no transition. However, Angular makes it easy to add them.
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Monkey-Patching The $q Service Using $provide.decorator() In AngularJS

BY @BENNADEL
Augmenting Angular services is not common practice, but if one must for any reason, this just may be the way to do it -- in the config phase of bootstrapping the app.
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