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Getting Started with Ionic

You're reading from   Getting Started with Ionic Get up and running with developing effective Hybrid Mobile Apps with Ionic

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jan 2016
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781784390570
Length 168 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Tools
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Author (1):
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Rahat Khanna Rahat Khanna
Author Profile Icon Rahat Khanna
Rahat Khanna
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Table of Contents (11) Chapters Close

Preface 1. All About Hybrid Mobile Apps and Ionic Framework FREE CHAPTER 2. Setting up the Environment the Right Way 3. Start Building Your First Ionic App 4. Navigation and Routing in an Ionic App 5. Accessorizing Your App with Ionic Components 6. Integrating App with Backend Services 7. Testing App on Real Devices 8. Working with Cordova Plugins – ngCordova 9. Future of Ionic Index

Introduction to Angular UI Router


The core of Ionic Framework is an open source routing module called Angular UI Router. It implements states that are a part of a state machine represented by the complete app. In a normal Angular app, we use ngRoute, which defines different routes, each of which can be associated with only a single ng-view and one corresponding templateUrl. In the UI Router, routes are represented by states (discussed in the following chapter).

States and URLs

In an app using the UI Router, the views are not tied up to the URL and hence you can change the parts of the app even without changing the URL. In any mobile app, the views are not so simple that they can be changed wholly but there is a complex hierarchy of views and sub-views that change based on different states. Due to this reason it is better to maintain states instead of routes and hence Ionic chose to use the Angular UI Router instead of ngRoute. States are also defined in the config section of an angular module...

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