Diego Perez
December 24, 2018
* This article will assume some basic knowledge of Angular so it can focus on the specific task of requesting and showing data from Cosmic
TL; DR
Take a look at the repository and install the app
What is this app about?
A typical company website is just a set of pages structured in a more or less simple navigation. We want to create a website that allows the user to create any number of pages and decide the structure for the navigation, without the need to wait for a code release. For that, we are going to rely on Cosmic and create the structure to hold this project. On this example, our bucket will have the following object types:
- Pages. This is a simple object, with no additional metafields.
- Navigation. It will hold a collection of Pages.
- Presets. This is a configuration object with a list of attributes that will help us start our app. It will hold the value for the homepage and the main navigation that we will use for the menu of our site.
Using the API
Now that we defined the structure of our data, we need to create our Angular app (I recommend using the Angular CLI) and create a service to make our calls to the Cosmic API. See how simple is to request a single page object from Cosmic:
Note that, for nested objects, Cosmic will not return the full tree, so sometimes you will need to concatenate calls to make the most of our service, e.g.: When fetching the main presets, you would probably want to include the navigation pages.
Our api calls need to be authenticated with a read key, we can include that on each method, but the easiest may be to create an interceptor. This will intercept all http requests, so we check if it's a Cosmic request and append the read key where necessary.
Routing to the pages
At this point, our website does nothing, the first thing it needs to do is to know how to load its first page. We need to create a routed module for the Pages, and set it to load on the root. Once inside the module, on its own routing, we will set a route for the parameter :slug to load the Page Component. And what happens when there is no route specified? This will be our most common scenario, for that, we set an empty route with a Guard.
A guard will be executing when matching a route and before loading the component, so we will use it to fetch the main presets from Cosmic, and redirect the app to the homepage we stablished.
Components
Now we have a route configuration that will load the Page component, and this is the way to load a page using the slug from the parameter list:
With this, we have a way to navigate via url, but we should also load a menu so the user can see the pages available. For that, we will add a menu component on the core module, as it will be shared throughout the app. Our menu will be composed of a navigation list, a logo and the company name; all of this is defined on the presets, so the menu will have a call like this:
All of this would allow you to quickly create a website using Angular and Cosmic, all that is left to do is to create the templates and extend the configuration to meet your needs.