Question:
How do I prevent Code-Duplication in similar HTML-Templates?
Description
I have several different Templates for the same view/directive which I want to change depending on the environment. The templates are mostly identical but contain some parts which need to be changed depending on the environment.
Example:
A view to enter userdata might look like this to an admin:
<p> Username: </p>
<input ng-model="ctrl.username"></input>
<p> Firstname: </p>
<input ng-model="ctrl.firstname"></input>
<p> Lastname: </p>
<input ng-model="ctrl.lastname"></input>
<p> Authorization-level: </p>
<input ng-model="ctrl.authlevel"></input>
However I need to show basically the same view to a user without allowing him to change his Authorization-level:
<p> Username: </p>
<input ng-model="ctrl.username"></input>
<p> Firstname: </p>
<input ng-model="ctrl.firstname"></input>
<p> Lastname: </p>
<input ng-model="ctrl.lastname"></input>
<p> Authorization-level: </p>
{{ctrl.authlevel}}
I would like to prevent duplicating the code for both templates.
Possible solutions:
ng-if
Obviously, I could use ng-if
to exchange html-blocks within a template depending on conditions. However, this does not scale well. The above example is simple, but imagine I have 5-10 different versions of a template. The code becomes increasingly hard to read with the number of versions of this template. Also, I would ideally like to prevent shipping the code for the admin-view to the user, which I can't if it is contained in the same html-file.
custom directives
I could wrap every HTML-node which needs to be replaced in its own directive. This would keep the main-template clean and I could exchange the HTML-Template for the directive depending on the environment. However, all those additional directives would cause a ton of boilerplate-code.
(This seems to be closest to Angular2's components though)
third-party-library angular-blocks
I found angular-blocks which seems to be tackling the issue I want to solve quite well . However, it doesn't seem to be very popular and looking at the implementation I am concerned that this might cause performance issues on large applications (due to several nested $compile
-calls).
Are there any options that I am missing? Do you know about any best-practices or style-guides for this?