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Angular Portal

A declarative approach for rendering part your components' view somewhere else in the DOM.

Inspired by Ryan Florence talk about portals in React, and by the implementation of portal-vue.

Why?

Consider a popup that should open when you click on a button. A naive approch will be to put the popup near the button:

<head>
  <style>
    .popup {
      position: absolute;
      left: 50%;
      top: 50%;
      transform: translate(-50%, -50%);
    }
  </style>
</head>
<body>
  <header>
    <button class="login-btn" ng-click="$ctrl.isOpen = true">Login</button>
    <div class="popup" ng-click="$ctrl.isOpen">
      <form name="$ctrl.loginForm">
        <input type="text" placeholder="email">
        <input type="password" placeholder="password">
      </form>
    </div>
  </header>

  <main>
    <h1>Hello World</h1>
  </main>
</body>

It works. You have easy access to your $scope and your popup is declared in contextually correct place.
Problem solved. Until, someone put position: relative on the header:

<body>
  <header class="position: relative">
    <button class="login-btn" ng-click="$ctrl.isOpen = true">Login</button>

    <!--
      Oh-oh.. Your positioned absolute popup is now messed up!
      It's no longer positioned relative to the body, but to the header instead.
      This is not what we want.
    -->
    <div class="popup" ng-if="$ctrl.isOpen">
      <form name="$ctrl.loginForm">
        <input type="text" placeholder="email">
        <input type="password" placeholder="password">
      </form>
    </div>
  </header>

  <main>
    <h1>Hello World</h1>
  </main>
</body>

One approch will be to let the button call a service instead:

$ctrl.openLoginPopup = function () {
  LoginPopupSrv.open().then(function (res) {
    console.log(res.username, res.passworld) 
  })
};

The service will render the popup at the bottom of the body which will solve the positioning problem.
It will also prevent the popup from inheriting unwanted CSS properties from the header.

It will work, and in some cases, this is the way to go. But we lost a few things along the way:

  • We lost the ability to declare our popup in a declarative manner. Instead, we call with an imperative API.
  • We no longer have easy access to our $scope.

This is where portals come handy. With a portal, we can specify that a part of our view should be rendered somewhere else in the DOM, in our case, the bottom of the body:

<body>
  <header>
    <button class="login-btn" ng-click="$ctrl.isOpen = true">Login</button>

    <!-- What ever is inside the portal will be rendered at the bottom of the body -->
    <portal to="body" ng-if="$ctrl.isOpen">
      <div class="popup">
        <form name="$ctrl.loginForm">
          <input type="text" placeholder="email">
          <input type="password" placeholder="password">
        </form>
      </div>
    </portal>
  </header>

  <main>
    <h1>Hello World</h1>
  </main>
</body>

Which results in:

<body>
  <header>
    <button class="login-btn" ng-click="$ctrl.isOpen = true">Login</button>
  </header>

  <main>
    <h1>Hello World</h1>
  </main>

  <!--
    The portal rendered our popup at the bottom of the body.
    Note that our component's $scope is still available here.
  -->
  <div class="popup">
    <form name="$ctrl.loginForm">
      <input type="text" placeholder="email">
      <input type="password" placeholder="password">
    </form>
  </div>
</body>
  • Portals are unopinionated, they are behavior-only components and have no style.
  • A portal serves as a low-level component,
    use it to build other components such as popups, tooltips and sliding sidebars

Here is an example of a popup made with angular-portal (try it yourself):

Install:

Add angular-portal to your app:

angular.module('app', ['portal'])

Usage:

<div>
  <input type="text" ng-model="$ctrl.value">

  <portal ng-if="$ctrl.isOpen">
     <!-- you component scope is available here -->
     <div>{{$ctrl.value}}</div>
  </portal>
</div>

Your portal will be rendered at the bottom of the body.

Yoy can also specify a different target:

<portal to="otherTarget">
  Content..
</portal>

....

<!-- Somewhere around the DOM -->
<portal-target name="otherTarget"></portal-target>
  • use <portal detach="false" .. /> to keep the portal's content in place

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