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Angular Cookbook

You're reading from   Angular Cookbook Over 80 actionable recipes every Angular developer should know

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Product type Paperback
Published in Dec 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803233444
Length 536 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Languages
Tools
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Author (1):
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Muhammad Ahsan Ayaz Muhammad Ahsan Ayaz
Author Profile Icon Muhammad Ahsan Ayaz
Muhammad Ahsan Ayaz
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Toc

Table of Contents (16) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Winning Component Communication 2. Working with Angular Directives and Built-In Control Flow FREE CHAPTER 3. The Magic of Dependency Injection in Angular 4. Understanding Angular Animations 5. Angular and RxJS – Awesomeness Combined 6. Reactive State Management with NgRx 7. Understanding Angular Navigation and Routing 8. Mastering Angular Forms 9. Angular and the Angular CDK 10. Writing Unit Tests in Angular with Jest 11. E2E Tests in Angular with Cypress 12. Performance Optimization in Angular 13. Building PWAs with Angular 14. Other Books You May Enjoy
15. Index

Detaching the change detector from components

In the previous recipe, we learned how to use the OnPush strategy in our components to avoid Angular change detection running unless one of the @Input() bindings has changed. There is, however, another way to tell Angular to not run change detection at all for a particular component and its subtree. This cuts the component and its subtree from the change detection cycle completely, as shown in Figure 12.5, which can result in an increase in the overall performance. This is also handy when you want full control of when to run change detection. In this recipe, you’ll learn how to completely detach the change detector from an Angular component to gain performance improvements.

Figure 12.5: Change detector detached from component tree

Getting ready

The app that we are going to work with resides in start/apps/chapter12/ng-cd-ref inside the cloned repository:

  1. Open the code repository in your code editor.
  2. ...
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