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Angular UI Development with PrimeNG

You're reading from   Angular UI Development with PrimeNG Build rich UI for Angular applications using PrimeNG

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788299572
Length 384 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Authors (2):
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Sudheer Jonna Sudheer Jonna
Author Profile Icon Sudheer Jonna
Sudheer Jonna
Oleg Varaksin Oleg Varaksin
Author Profile Icon Oleg Varaksin
Oleg Varaksin
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Toc

Table of Contents (11) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Getting Started with Angular and PrimeNG 2. Theming Concepts and Layouts FREE CHAPTER 3. Enhanced Inputs and Selects 4. Button and Panel Components 5. Data Iteration Components 6. Amazing Overlays and Messages 7. Endless Menu Variations 8. Creating Charts and Maps 9. Miscellaneous Use Cases and Best Practices 10. Creating Robust Applications

Components, services, and dependency injection

Normally, you write Angular applications by composing HTML templates with the Angular-specific markup and component classes to manage those templates. A component is simply a TypeScript class annotated with @Component. The @Component decorator is used to define the associated metadata. It expects an object with the following most used properties:

  • selector: This is the name of the HTML tag representing this component
  • template: This is an inline-defined template with HTML/Angular markup for the view
  • templateUrl: This is the path to an external file where the template resides
  • styles: An inline-defined styles to be applied to this component's view
  • styleUrls: An array of paths to external files with styles to be applied to this component's view
  • providers: An array of providers available to this component and its children
  • exportAs: This is the name under which the component instance is exported in a template
  • changeDetection: This is the change detection strategy used by this component
  • encapsulation: This is the style encapsulation strategy used by this component

A component class interacts with the view through an API of properties and methods. Component classes should delegate complex tasks to services where the business logic resides. Services are just classes that Angular instantiates and then injects into components. If you register services at the root component level, they act as singletons and share data across multiple components. In the next section, Angular modularity and lifecycle hooks, we will see how to register services. The following example demonstrates how to use components and services. We will write a service class ProductService and then specify an argument of type ProductService in the constructor of ProductComponent. Angular will automatically inject that service into the component:

import {Injectable, Component} from '@angular/core';

@Injectable()
export class ProductService {
products: Product[];

getProducts(): Array<Product> {
// retrieve products from somewhere...
return products;
}
}

@Component({
selector: 'product-count',
template: `<h2 class="count">Found {{products.length}} products</h2>`,
styles: [`
h2.count {
height: 80px;
width: 400px;
}
`]
})
export default class ProductComponent {
products: Product[] = [];

constructor(productService: ProductService) {
this.products = productService.getProducts();
}
}
Notice that we applied the @Injectable() decorator to the service class. This is necessary for emitting metadata that Angular needs to inject other dependencies into this service. Using @Injectable is a good programming style even if you don't inject other services into your service.

It is good to know what an item in the providers array looks like. An item is an object with the provide property (symbol used for dependency injection) and one of the three properties useClass, useFactory, or useValue that provide implementation details:

{provide: MyService, useClass: MyMockService}
{provide: MyService, useFactory: () => {return new MyMockService()}}
{provide: MyValue, useValue: 50}
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