Modernizes Angular code such as components and directives to follow best practices using both automatic CLI migrations and Bitwarden-specific patterns. YOU must use this skill when someone requests modernizing Angular code. DO NOT invoke for general Angular discussions unrelated to modernization.
Installation
Details
Usage
After installing, this skill will be available to your AI coding assistant.
Verify installation:
npx agent-skills-cli listSkill Instructions
name: angular-modernization description: Modernizes Angular code such as components and directives to follow best practices using both automatic CLI migrations and Bitwarden-specific patterns. YOU must use this skill when someone requests modernizing Angular code. DO NOT invoke for general Angular discussions unrelated to modernization. allowed-tools: Read, Write, Glob, Bash(npx ng generate:*)
Angular Modernization
Transforms legacy Angular components to modern architecture using a two-step approach:
- Automated migrations - Angular CLI schematics for standalone, control flow, and signals
- Bitwarden patterns - ADR compliance, OnPush change detection, proper visibility, thin components
Workflow
Step 1: Run Angular CLI Migrations
β οΈ CRITICAL: ALWAYS use Angular CLI migrations when available. DO NOT manually migrate features that have CLI schematics.
Angular provides automated schematics that handle edge cases, update tests, and ensure correctness. Manual migration should ONLY be used for patterns not covered by CLI tools.
IMPORTANT:
- Always run the commands using
npx ng. - All the commands must be run on directories and NOT files. Use the
--pathoption to target directories. - Run migrations in order (some depend on others)
1. Standalone Components
npx ng generate @angular/core:standalone --path=<directory> --mode=convert-to-standalone
NgModule-based β standalone architecture
2. Control Flow Syntax
npx ng generate @angular/core:control-flow
*ngIf, *ngFor, *ngSwitch β @if, @for, @switch
3. Signal Inputs
npx ng generate @angular/core:signal-input-migration
@Input() β signal inputs
4. Signal Outputs
npx ng generate @angular/core:output-migration
@Output() β signal outputs
5. Signal Queries
npx ng generate @angular/core:signal-queries-migration
@ViewChild, @ContentChild, etc. β signal queries
6. inject() Function
npx ng generate @angular/core:inject-migration
Constructor injection β inject() function
7. Self-Closing Tag
npx ng generate @angular/core:self-closing-tag
Updates templates to self-closing syntax
8. Unused Imports
npx ng generate @angular/core:unused-imports
Removes unused imports
Step 2: Apply Bitwarden Patterns
See migration-patterns.md for detailed examples.
- Add OnPush change detection
- Apply visibility modifiers (
protectedfor template access,privatefor internal) - Convert local component state to signals
- Keep service observables (don't convert to signals)
- Extract business logic to services
- Organize class members correctly
- Update tests for standalone
Step 3: Validate
- Fix linting and formatting using
npm run lint:fix - Run tests using
npm run test
If any errors occur, fix them accordingly.
Key Decisions
Signals vs Observables
- Signals - Component-local state only (ADR-0027)
- Observables - Service state and cross-component communication (ADR-0003)
- Use
toSignal()to bridge observables into signal-based components
Visibility
protected- Template-accessible membersprivate- Internal implementation
Other Rules
- Always add OnPush change detection
- No TypeScript enums (use const objects with type aliases per ADR-0025)
- No code regions (refactor instead)
- Thin components (business logic in services)
Validation Checklist
Before completing migration:
- OnPush change detection added
- Visibility modifiers applied (
protected/private) - Signals for component state, observables for service state
- Class members organized (see migration-patterns.md)
- Tests updated and passing
- No new TypeScript enums
- No code regions
References
Bitwarden ADRs
- ADR-0003: Observable Data Services
- ADR-0025: No TypeScript Enums
- ADR-0027: Angular Signals
- Bitwarden Angular Style Guide
Angular Resources
More by bitwarden
View allThis skill should be used when implementing Android code in Bitwarden. Covers critical patterns, gotchas, and anti-patterns unique to this codebase. Triggered by "How do I implement a ViewModel?", "Create a new screen", "Add navigation", "Write a repository", "BaseViewModel pattern", "State-Action-Event", "type-safe navigation", "@Serializable route", "SavedStateHandle persistence", "process death recovery", "handleAction", "sendAction", "Hilt module", "Repository pattern", "implementing a screen", "adding a data source", "handling navigation", "encrypted storage", "security patterns", "Clock injection", "DataState", or any questions about implementing features, screens, ViewModels, data sources, or navigation in the Bitwarden Android app.
Android-specific code review checklist and MVVM/Compose pattern validation for Bitwarden Android β use this for any review task, even if the user doesn't explicitly ask for a "checklist". Detects change type automatically and loads the right review strategy (feature additions, bug fixes, UI refinements, refactoring, dependency updates, infrastructure). Triggered by "review PR", "review changes", "review this code", "check this code", "Android review", code review requests on Kotlin/ViewModel/Composable/Repository/Gradle files, or any time someone asks to look at a diff, PR, or code changes in bitwarden/android.
This skill should be used when writing or reviewing tests for Android code in Bitwarden. Triggered by "BaseViewModelTest", "BitwardenComposeTest", "BaseServiceTest", "stateEventFlow", "bufferedMutableSharedFlow", "FakeDispatcherManager", "expectNoEvents", "assertCoroutineThrows", "createMockCipher", "createMockSend", "asSuccess", "Why is my Bitwarden test failing?", or testing questions about ViewModels, repositories, Compose screens, or data sources in Bitwarden.
Performs comprehensive code reviews for Bitwarden iOS projects, verifying architecture compliance, style guidelines, compilation safety, test coverage, and security requirements. Use when reviewing pull requests, checking commits, analyzing code changes, verifying Bitwarden coding standards, evaluating unidirectional data flow pattern, checking services container dependency injection usage, reviewing security implementations, or assessing test coverage. Automatically invoked by CI pipeline or manually for interactive code reviews.
