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Angular Design Patterns and Best Practices

You're reading from   Angular Design Patterns and Best Practices Create scalable and adaptable applications that grow to meet evolving user needs

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Product type Paperback
Published in Feb 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781837631971
Length 270 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Alvaro Camillo Neto Alvaro Camillo Neto
Author Profile Icon Alvaro Camillo Neto
Alvaro Camillo Neto
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Table of Contents (19) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1: Reinforcing the Foundations
2. Chapter 1: Starting Projects the Right Way FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Organizing Your Application 4. Chapter 3: TypeScript Patterns for Angular 5. Chapter 4: Components and Pages 6. Chapter 5: Angular Services and the Singleton Pattern 7. Part 2: Leveraging Angular’s Capabilities
8. Chapter 6: Handling User Inputs: Forms 9. Chapter 7: Routes and Routers 10. Chapter 8: Improving Backend Integrations: the Interceptor Pattern 11. Chapter 9: Exploring Reactivity with RxJS 12. Part 3: Architecture and Deployment
13. Chapter 10: Design for Tests: Best Practices 14. Chapter 11: Micro Frontend with Angular Elements 15. Chapter 12: Packaging Everything – Best Practices for Deployment 16. Chapter 13: The Angular Renaissance 17. Index 18. Other Books You May Enjoy

Preparing a page to be loaded by the base application

With our micro frontend project ready, we need to prepare it to be consumed by another application. There are several ways to share micro frontends, from the simplest (and obsolete), with the use of iframes, to more modern, but complex, solutions such as module federation.

In this section, we will use an approach widely used in the market, which is the use of Web Components. Web Components is a specification that aims to standardize components created by different frameworks into a model that can be consumed between them. In other words, by creating an Angular component following this specification, an application created in React or Vue could consume this component. Although Web Components was not created with micro frontend projects in mind, we can see that its definition fits perfectly for what we need.

Like almost everything in the Angular framework, to create this type of component, we don’t need to do it manually...

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