Using Hot Module Replacement in Angular 11

iamscottcab

Scott

Posted on November 13, 2020

Using Hot Module Replacement in Angular 11

Angular 11 was released today and with it comes a large number of performance upgrades, bugfixes (including the third most popular issue) and improved logging.

Not only was the upgrade from Angular V10 to V11 painless but I wanted to share the new Hot Module Replacement feature. This has been exposed on the CLI if you hadn't tried it in previous versions, so now is a great time to dive in and give it a go.

For those unaware this feature is not native to Angular, rather webpack. If you'd like to read more about it you can find their documentation here. In short you can think of Hot Module Replacement as a more advanced version of a file watcher, only replacing the modules that need replacement and (where possible) preserving state. So what does this look like in action? See the videos below (which are best viewed full screen).

Classic Angular Reloading


The above should look very common for front end developers. We are testing out our model binding in our form. We decide that it's working well but we want to change the label on our input. Doing so forces a refresh of the page and we lose our state.

Hot Module Replacement in Angular


With the Hot Module replacement flag used we see a slightly different story. The initial flow is the same. We test our model binding and again want to change the label on the input. This time the Hot Module Replacement preserves our state and our input still has our user generated value. Nice!

Adding Hot Module Replacement & Use Cases

In my current project I've nominated that we additively pick up this new feature. For most uses cases the standard watcher works just fine so retooling for a slightly better development experience for some might hurt others in the team. I propose you add a new script to your package.json while you're adopting this to see if it suits your needs. Perhaps something like "serve:hmr": "ng serve --hmr". Then your team can either run npm start for their normal experience or npm run serve:hmr. This gives you the best of both options and allows you to pick and choose which reload strategy based on the functionality you are building out.

Consider using Hot Module Replacement when:

  • You have a complex flow that you do not want to restart.
  • You are making cosmetic changes and want to test on non-standard input (such as long strings).
  • You are fixing / tweaking API calls and want to reuse the same form values.

What else do you like about the Angular 11 update? Let me know on Twitter or check out my content on my site.

💖 💪 🙅 🚩
iamscottcab
Scott

Posted on November 13, 2020

Join Our Newsletter. No Spam, Only the good stuff.

Sign up to receive the latest update from our blog.

Related