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Learning Angular for .NET Developers

You're reading from   Learning Angular for .NET Developers Develop dynamic .NET web applications powered by Angular 4

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jun 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781785884283
Length 248 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Rajesh Gunasundaram Rajesh Gunasundaram
Author Profile Icon Rajesh Gunasundaram
Rajesh Gunasundaram
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Toc

Table of Contents (10) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Getting Started with Angular FREE CHAPTER 2. Angular Building Blocks - Part 1 3. Angular Building Blocks - Part 2 4. Using TypeScript with Angular 5. Creating an Angular Single-Page Application in Visual Studio 6. Creating ASP.NET Core Web API Services for Angular 7. Creating an Application Using Angular, ASP.NET MVC, and Web API in Visual Studio 8. Testing Angular Applications 9. What s New in Angular and ASP.NET Core

Decorators and metadata


As you saw in the last section, we define JavaScript plain classes for a component, and we annotate it with some information to inform the Angular framework that this class is a component.

We leverage the Typescript syntax and attach the classes with metadata using the decorator feature. To make a class as a component, we add the @Component decorator, as shown in the following code:

@Component({...})
export class FirstComponent {...}

As you can see, the code snippet shows that the FirstComponent class has been decorated as a component.

Now, let's attach metadata to the FirstComponent class using the decorator syntax:

@Component({ 
   selector: 'first-component', 
   templateUrl: 'app/first.component.html' 
}) 
export class FirstComponent {...} 

Here, we have added metadata, such as a selector and templateUrl. The selector metadata configured in the component tells Angular to create the instance of a component when it encounters the <first-controller> markup:

<first...
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