Original answer
This is a common gotcha with Typescript, you say device
is of type Device
, but it isn't. It has all of the same properties as a Device
would, but since it isn't a Device
it does not have the expected methods.
You need to ensure that you instantiate Device
for each entry in your Page
, perhaps in the ngOnInit
of the parent component:
I don't know the structure of Page
, but if it's an array try the following.
ngOnInit() {
this.deviceService.list('', 'sensor', ).subscribe(
res => {
this.devices = res.results.map(x => Object.assign(new Device(), x));
}
)
}
Further explanation
Let's try a typescript example, as this behaviour doesn't have anything to do with Angular. We'll use localStorage
to represent data coming from an external source, but this works just the same with HTTP.
interface SimpleValue {
a: number;
b: string;
}
function loadFromStorage<T>(): T {
// Get from local storage.
// Ignore the potential null value because we know this key will exist.
const storedValue = localStorage.getItem('MyKey') as string;
// Note how there is no validation in this function.
// I can't validate that the loaded value is actually T
// because I don't know what T is.
return JSON.parse(storedValue);
}
const valueToSave: SimpleValue = { a: 1, b: 'b' };
localStorage.setItem('MyKey', JSON.stringify(valueToSave));
const loadedValue = loadFromStorage<SimpleValue>();
// It works!
console.log(loadedValue);
That works just fine, awesome. A typescript interface is purely a compile-time structure and, unlike a class, it has no equivalent in JavaScript - it's just a developer hint. But this also means that if you create an interface for an external value, like SimpleValue
above, and get it wrong then the compiler is still going to trust you know what you're talking about, it can't possibly validate this at compile time.
What about loading a class from an external source? How does it differ? If we take the example above and change SimpleValue
into a class without changing anything else then it will still work. But there is a difference. Unlike interfaces, classes are transpiled into their JavaScript equivalent, in other words, they exist past the point of compilation. In our above example this doesn't cause a problem, so let's try an example that does cause a problem.
class SimpleClass {
constructor(public a: number, public b: string) { }
printA() {
console.log(this.a);
}
}
const valueToSave: SimpleClass = new SimpleClass(1, 'b');
localStorage.setItem('MyKey', JSON.stringify(valueToSave));
const loadedValue = loadFromStorage<SimpleClass>();
console.log(loadedValue.a); // 1
console.log(loadedValue.b); // 'b'
loadedValue.printA(); // TypeError: loadedValue.printA is not a function
The loaded value had the properties we expected, but not the methods, uh oh! The problem is that methods get created when new SimpleClass
is called. When we created valueToSave
we did indeed instantiate the class, but then we turned it into a JSON string and sent it off elsewhere, and JSON has no concept of methods so the information was lost. When we loaded the data in loadFromStorage
we did not call new SimpleClass
, we just trusted that the caller knew what the stored type would be.
How do we deal with this? Let's go back to Angular for a moment and consider a common use case: dates. JSON has no Date type, JavaScript does, so how do we retrieve a date from our server and have it work as a date? Here's a pattern I like to use.
interface UserContract {
id: string;
name: string;
lastLogin: string; // ISO string representation of a Date.
}
class UserModel {
id: string; // Same as above
name: string; // Same as above
lastLogin: Date; // Different!
constructor(contract: UserContract) {
// This is the explicit version of the constructor.
this.id = contract.id;
this.name = contract.name;
this.lastLogin = new Date(contract.lastLogin);
// If you want to avoid the boilerplate (and safety) of the explicit constructor
// an alternative is to use Object.assign:
// Object.assign(this, contract, { lastLogin: new Date(contract.lastLogin) });
}
printFriendlyLastLogin() {
console.log(this.lastLogin.toLocaleString());
}
}
import { HttpClient } from '@angular/common/http';
import { Injectable, Component, OnInit } from '@angular/core';
import { Observable } from 'rxjs';
import { map } from 'rxjs/operators';
@Injectable({
providedIn: 'root'
})
class MyService {
constructor(private httpClient: HttpClient) { }
getUser(): Observable<UserModel> {
// Contract represents the data being returned from the external data source.
return this.httpClient.get<UserContract>('my.totally.not.real.api.com')
.pipe(
map(contract => new UserModel(contract))
);
}
}
@Component({
// bla bla
})
class MyComponent implements OnInit {
constructor(private myService: MyService) { }
ngOnInit() {
this.myService.getUser().subscribe(x => {
x.printFriendlyLastLogin(); // this works
console.log(x.lastLogin.getFullYear()); // this works too
});
}
}
Perhaps a bit verbose, but it's the most robust and flexible pattern I've used for dealing with rich frontend models coming from flat backend contracts.