I had a similar issue when I wanted to use a computed property in a template.
I found a good solution in this article:
http://chariotsolutions.com/blog/post/angular-2-beta-0-somnambulant-inauguration-lands-small-app-rxjs-typescript/
You create a static method on your model that takes an array of objects and then call that method from the mapping function. In the static method you can then either call the constructor you've already defined or use a copy constructor:
Mapping Method
getPosts() {
return this.http.get(this._postsUrl)
.map(res => Post.fromJSONArray(res.json()))
.catch(this.handleError);
}
Existing Constructor
export class Post {
// Existing constructor.
constructor(public title:string, public content:string, public img:string = 'test') {}
// New static method.
static fromJSONArray(array: Array<Object>): Post[] {
return array.map(obj => new Post(obj['title'], obj['content'], obj['img']));
}
}
Copy Constructor
export class Post {
title:string;
content:string;
img:string;
// Copy constructor.
constructor(obj: Object) {
this.title = obj['title'];
this.content = obj['content'];
this.img = obj['img'] || 'test';
}
// New static method.
static fromJSONArray(array: Array<Object>): Post[] {
return array.map(obj => new Post(obj);
}
}
If you're using an editor that supports code completion, you can change the type of the obj
and array
parameters to Post
:
export class Post {
title:string;
content:string;
img:string;
// Copy constructor.
constructor(obj: Post) {
this.title = obj.title;
this.content = obj.content;
this.img = obj.img || 'test';
}
// New static method.
static fromJSONArray(array: Array<Post>): Post[] {
return array.map(obj => new Post(obj);
}
}
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