What is the difference between Polymer elements and AngularJS directives?
On the Polymer Getting Started page, we see an example of Polymer in action:
<html>
<head>
<!-- 1. Shim missing platform features -->
<script src="polymer-all/platform/platform.js"></script>
<!-- 2. Load a component -->
<link rel="import" href="x-foo.html">
</head>
<body>
<!-- 3. Declare the component by its tag. -->
<x-foo></x-foo>
</body>
</html>
What you will notice is <x-foo></x-foo>
being defined by platform.js
and x-foo.html
.
It seems like this is the equivalent to a directive module in AngularJS:
angular.module('xfoo', [])
.controller('X-Foo', ['$scope',function($scope) {
$scope.text = 'hey hey!';
})
.directive('x-foo', function() {
return {
restrict: 'EA',
replace: true,
controller: 'X-Foo',
templateUrl: '/views/x-foo.html',
link: function(scope, controller) {
}
};
});
What is the difference between the two?
What problems does Polymer solve that AngularJS has not or will not?
Are there plans to tie Polymer in with AngularJS in the future?
Solution 1:
You're not the first to ask this question :) Let me clarify a couple of things before getting to your questions.
-
Polymer's
webcomponents.js
is a library that contains several polyfills for various W3C APIs that fall under the Web Components umbrella. These are:- Custom Elements
- HTML Imports
<template>
- Shadow DOM
- Pointer Events
- others
The left-nav in the documentation (polymer-project.org) has a page for all of these "Platform technologies". Each of those pages also has a pointer to the individual polyfill.
<link rel="import" href="x-foo.html">
is an HTML Import. Imports are a useful tool for including HTML in other HTML. You can include<script>
,<link>
, markup, or whatever else in an import.Nothing "links"
<x-foo>
to x-foo.html. In your example, it's assumed the Custom Element definition of<x-foo>
(e.g.<element name="x-foo">
) is defined in x-foo.html. When the browser sees that definition, it's registered as a new element.
On to questions!
What is the difference between Angular and Polymer?
We covered some of this in our Q&A video. In general, Polymer is a library that aims to use (and show how to use) Web Components. Its foundation is Custom Elements (e.g. everything you build is a web component) and it evolves as the web evolves. To that end, we only support the latest version of the modern browsers.
I'll use this image to describe Polymer's entire architecture stack:
RED layer: We get tomorrow's web through a set of polyfills. Keep in mind, those libraries go away over time as browsers adopt the new APIs.
YELLOW layer: Sprinkle in some sugar with polymer.js. This layer is our opinion on how to use the spec'd APIs, together. It also adds things like data-binding, syntatic sugar, change watchers, published properties...We think these things are helpful for building web component-based apps.
GREEN: The comprehensive set of UI components (green layer) is still in progress. These will be web components that use all of the red + yellow layers.
Angular directives vs. Custom Elements?
See Alex Russell's answer. Basically, Shadow DOM allows composing bits of HTML but also is a tool for encapsulating that HTML. This is fundamentally a new concept on the web and something other frameworks will leverage.
What problems does Polymer solve that AngularJS has not or will not?
Similarities: declarative templates, data binding.
Differences: Angular has high level APIs for services, filters, animations, etc., supports IE8, and at this point, is a much more robust framework for building production apps. Polymer is just starting out in alpha.
Are there plans to tie Polymer in with AngularJS in the future?
They're separate projects. That said, both the Angular and Ember teams announced they'll eventually move to using the underlying platform APIs in their own frameworks.
^ This is a huge win IMO. In a world where web developers have powerful tools (Shadow DOM, Custom Elements), framework authors also can utilize these primitives to create better frameworks. Most of them currently go through great hoops to "get the job done".
UPDATE:
There's a really great article on this topic: "Here’s the difference between Polymer and Angular"
Solution 2:
For your question:
Are there plans to tie Polymer in with AngularJS in the future?
From the official twitter account of AngularJS : "angularjs will use polymer for its widgets. It's win-win"
source : https://twitter.com/angularjs/status/335417160438542337
Solution 3:
In this video 2 guys from AngularJS talked about differences and similarities about this two frameworks (AngularJS 1.2 and Beyond).
These links will bring you to the correct Q&A's:
- http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W13qDdJDHp8&feature=share&t=56m34s
- http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W13qDdJDHp8&feature=share&t=59m8s
Solution 4:
1 & 2) Polymer components are scoped because of their hidden tree in the shadow dom. That means that their style and behaviour cannot bleed out. Angular is not scoped to that particular directive you create like a polymer web component. An angular directive could possibly conflict with something in your global scope. IMO the benefit you will get from polymer is what I explained.. modular components that have scoped css & JavaScript to that particular component that nothing can touch. Untouchable DOM!
Angular directives can be created so that you can annotate an element with several pieces of functionality. In Polymer web components that is not the case. If you want to combine functionality of components you include two components into another component (or wrap them in another component) or you can extend an existing component. Remember the main difference still is that each component is scoped in polymer web components. You can share css & js files across several components or you can inline them.
3) Yes, Angular plans on incorporating polymer in version 2+ according to Rob Dodson and Eric Bidelman
It's funny how nobody here has mentioned the word scope. I think that is one of the major differences.
There are many differences, but they also have a heck of a lot in common when it comes to creating modular lego like pieces of functionality for an app. I think it's safe to say that Angular would be the application framework and polymer could one day live in the same app along side directives with the major difference being scope but polymer may be a replacement for a lot of your current directives. But I see no reason why Angular could not work as-is and include polymer components as well.
Reading through the answers again while I write this, I noticed that Eric Bidelman(ebidel) did kind of cover that in his answer:
"Shadow DOM allows composing bits of HTML but also is a tool for encapsulating that HTML."
To give credit where credit is due, I got my answers from listening to many interviews with Rob Dodson and Eric Bidelman. But I feel the answer wasn't worded to give this guy's question the understanding that he wanted. With that said, I think I have touched on the answer he is looking for, but in no way do I possess more information about the subject than Rob Dodson and Eric Bidelman
Here are my main sources for the information I have gathered.
JavaScript Jabber - Polymer with Rob Dodson and Eric Bidelman
Shop Talk Show - Web Components With Rob Dodson