How to rename a component in Angular CLI?

AngularAngular CliRenameAngular Components

Angular Problem Overview


Is there any shortcut to rename a component with the Angular CLI other than manually editing all the component files such as folder name, .css, .ts, spec.ts and app.module.ts?

Angular Solutions


Solution 1 - Angular

No!

There is no command which will change the name of all files generated using the component create command. So created ts, html, css/scss, .spec.ts files need to be manually renamed/edited.

I am a frequent user of angular cli and I think this would be a nice-to-have command as some time we just create angular components and need to rename them. As this rename command is not there, deleting the created angular component, directive, etc and again running the command to create the component is really a pain.

Here is the discussion link to add this feature rename angular component

Solution 2 - Angular

Currently Angular CLI doesn't support the feature of renaming or refactoring code.

You can achieve such functionality with the help of some IDE.

Intellij, Eclipse, VSCode etc.. has default support the refactoring.

Nowadays VSCode is showing some uptrend,personally I'm a fan of this

Refactoring with VSCode

Determinig reference : - VS Code help you find all references of a variable by selecting variable and pressing shortcut SHIFT + F12. This works incredibly well with Type Script.

Renaming all instances of reference :- After finding all the references you can press F2 will open a popup and you can change the value and click enter this will update all the instances of reference.

Renaming files and imports You can rename a file and its import references with a plugin. More details can be found here

enter image description here

With above steps after renaming the variables and files you can achieve the angular component renaming.

Solution 3 - Angular

Yes!

Now there is.

There is an Extension for VS Code to do all of these steps for you. It's called Rename Angular Component.

I have hopes of porting it to WebStorm and a Schematic later.

Previously, it took at least three semi-automated steps in VS Code as a minimum. This Extension does all of them.

I realise this is promoting my own solution. But it is free, open source, and the complete answer. If it doesn't do everything you're looking for, you can post issues on the repo, and it will be improved.

Solution 4 - Angular

Here is a checklist I use to rename a component:

1.Rename the component class (VSCode Rename Symbol will update all the references)

<Old Name>Component => <New Name>Component

2.Rename @Component selector along with references (use VSCode's Replace in Files):

app-<old-name> => app-<new-name>

Result:
@Component({
  selector: 'app-<old-name>' => 'app-<new-name>',
  ...
})

<app-{old-name}></app-{old-name}> => <app-{new-name}></app-{new-name}>

3.Rename component folder (when renaming folder in VSCode, it will update references in module and other components)

src\app\<module>\<old-name> => src\app\<module>\<new-name>

4.Rename component files (renaming manually will be the fastest, but you can also use a terminal to rename all at once)

<old-name>.component.* => <new-name>.component.*

Bash:
find . -name "<old-name>.component.*" -exec rename 's/\/<old-name>\.component/\/<new-name>.component/' '{}' +

PowerShell: 
Get-Item <old-name>.component.* | % { Rename-Item $_ <new-name>.component.$($_.Extension) }

Cmd:
rename <old-name>.component.* <new-name>.component.*

5.Replace file references in @Component (use VSCode's Replace in Files):

<old-name>.component => <new-name>.component

Result:
@Component({
  ...
  templateUrl: './<old-name>.component.html' => './<old-name>.component.html',
  styleUrls: ['./<old-name>.component.scss'] => ['./<new-name>.component.scss']
})

That should be sufficient

Solution 5 - Angular

While the OP asks for a CLI command, some of the answers focus on the IDEs. In this answer I just confirm, that the current WebStorm/IntelliJ does allow renaming the component. All that needs to be done is attempting to rename the class in the .ts file. You will be presented with:

enter image description here

and the rename will be performed in all relevant places.

Solution 6 - Angular

I personally have not found any command for the same. Just make a new component (renamed name) and copy paste the previous component's html, css, and ts. In ts obviously the class name would be replaced. Its the safest method but does take a little time.

Solution 7 - Angular

In WebStorm, you can right click → Refactor → Rename on the name of the component in the TypeScript file and it will change the name everywhere.

Solution 8 - Angular

As the first answer indicated, currently there is no way to rename components so we're all just talking about work-arounds! This is what i do:

  1. Create the new component you liked.

    ng generate component newName

  2. Use Visual studio code editor or whatever other editor to then conveniently move code/pieces side by side!

  3. In Linux, use grep & sed (find & replace) to find/replaces references.

    grep -ir "oldname"

    cd your folder

    sed -i 's/oldName/newName/g' *

Solution 9 - Angular

Just rename the files and components as you normally would think, then restart ng serve. Easy peasy.

Rename the files, paths, and references. The key is that you have to close your running server and start it again after everything is renamed.

Solution 10 - Angular

If you are using VS Code, you can rename the .ts, .html, .css/.scss, .spec.ts files and the IDE will take care of the imports for you. Therefore there will be no complaints from the files that import files from your component (such as app.module.ts). However, you will still have to rename the component name everywhere it is being used.

Solution 11 - Angular

There is no rename cli command yet. But the easiest way I have found to solve this problem is to generate a new component on the cli and copy the contents into the new component. Then delete the original component and you will have one error for each spot in your codebase where you need to rename to the new component name. Once all the errors are dealt with you are done! :)

PS: Also you will have to delete the import statements for the old component.

Attributions

All content for this solution is sourced from the original question on Stackoverflow.

The content on this page is licensed under the Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-SA 4.0) license.

Content TypeOriginal AuthorOriginal Content on Stackoverflow
QuestionThomas EasoView Question on Stackoverflow
Solution 1 - AngularAniruddha DasView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 2 - AngularSAMUELView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 3 - Angulartomwhite007View Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 4 - AngularVitaliy UlantikovView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 5 - AngularP MareckiView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 6 - AngularPriyanka AroraView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 7 - AngularOllieView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 8 - Angularsalah-1View Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 9 - AngularMatt HView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 10 - AngularBuddhiprabhaView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 11 - AngularNidorinoView Answer on Stackoverflow