Angular's built in script directive is really nice for embedded templates, but not much else. If you are like me, you have found yourself wanting to be able to extend it to work for other types of embedded data. Luckily this turns out to be pretty easy, but not obvious.

The Problem

Angular allows you to specify templates inline using the <script> tag, but it only supports a single type of type="text/ng-template" .

But what if you've got a view that also has some context specific info that you want to make available to the client. You don't want to make another trip to the server to get it, so you encode it as JSON, and embed it into a <script> tag.

<script type= "text/context-info" > { "name" : "foo-view" , "id" : 34 , "tags" : [ "angular" , "javascript" , "directives" ] } </script>

Wouldn't it be nice if you could just teach the script directive to handle a new type?

Oh but you can!

Decorating is Fun!

One amazing feature of Angular is the ability to intercept a service at the time of creation and do something with it. While you may already know about the $provide.decorator method, you may not know that you can also intercept a directive.

What does that look like?

angular . module ( 'myApp' ). config ([ '$provide' , function ( $provide ) { $provide . decorator ( 'scriptDirective' , function ( $delegate ){ //$delegate is an array, and index '0' is the Angular directive }); } ]);

That will let us grab the directive before it ever gets used, and extend it as we please. We can use the amazing flexibility of JavaScript to add new functionality to the existing directive in order to achieve our desired results.

The script directive uses the compile method to work it's magic so that is where we are going to tap in. The first thing we need to do is grab a reference to the original compile method.

var scriptDirective = $delegate [ 0 ], originalCompile = scriptDirective . compile ;

Now we can replace the compile method with our own version that will check the type attribute for our custom type and handle it accordingly. In order to make sure we don't mess up the existing directive we simply let it fall through to the original compile method.

Finally we just return the intercepted $delegate once the modifications have been made.

scriptDirective . compile = function ( elem , attr , transclude ){ if ( attr . type === 'text/context-info' ){ var contextInfo = JSON . parse ( element [ 0 ]. text ); //Custom service that can be injected into // the decorator contextInfoService . addContextInfo ( contextInfo ); } originalCompile ( elem , attr , transclude ); }; return $delegate ;

Live Demo

Voila! Now you can extend the built in script directive with your own custom types.

Conclusion