I'm not sure that this is necessary. Stalling indicated AoA does not depend on flap position, although stalling pitch and airspeed do.
Airspeed indicators show the difference between clean and flaps extended stalling speed, which leads to the conclusion that stalling iAoA must also change, but it does not.
Second order effects may change iAoA and leading edge devices will definitely do so, but not conventional trailing edge flaps.
After all, if stalling iAoA changed with flap position, different parts of the wings would stall differently depending on flap position, leading to some pretty exciting changes in stall behaviour.
Note: I'm using iAoA here to represent indicated AoA from a probe and NOT the Engineer's definition of AoA which depends on the trailing edge position of the wing (camber). There is a difference and it leads to confusion between real-world results using a probe and results using the formal definition.