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Accelerating Angular Development with Ivy

You're reading from   Accelerating Angular Development with Ivy A practical guide to building faster and more testable Angular apps with the new Ivy engine

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Product type Paperback
Published in Oct 2021
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781800205215
Length 242 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (3):
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Lars Gyrup Brink Nielsen Lars Gyrup Brink Nielsen
Author Profile Icon Lars Gyrup Brink Nielsen
Lars Gyrup Brink Nielsen
Jacob Andresen Jacob Andresen
Author Profile Icon Jacob Andresen
Jacob Andresen
Mateus Carniatto Mateus Carniatto
Author Profile Icon Mateus Carniatto
Mateus Carniatto
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Table of Contents (14) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Chapter 1: Discovering New APIs and Language Syntax 2. Chapter 2: Boosting Developer Productivity Through Tooling, Configuration, and Convenience FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 3: Introducing CSS Custom Properties and New Provider Scopes 4. Chapter 4: Exploring Angular Components Features 5. Chapter 5: Using CSS Custom Properties 6. Chapter 6: Using Angular Components 7. Chapter 7: Component Harnesses 8. Chapter 8: Additional Provider Scopes 9. Chapter 9: Debugging with the New Ivy Runtime APIs 10. Chapter 10: Using the Angular Compatibility Compiler 11. Chapter 11: Migrating Your Angular Application from View Engine to Ivy 12. Chapter 12: Embracing Ahead-of-Time Compilation 13. Other Books You May Enjoy

Introducing the new Ivy runtime API

If you have worked with Angular versions before Angular Ivy, you might be familiar with the NgProbe API, which was available in the global scope at runtime as the ng.probe function. Angular Ivy replaces this API with a set of new runtime debugging functions, which are only available in Angular development mode.

The new API contains the following functions:

  • ng.applyChanges(component: {}): void;

    Mark the specified component for dirty checking if it is using the OnPush change detection strategy. Afterward, trigger a change detection cycle.

  • ng.getComponent<T>(element: Element): T | null;

    Resolve the Angular component that is attached to the specified DOM element.

  • ng.getContext<T>(element: Element): T | null;

    When passed a DOM element generated by a structural directive such as NgIf or NgFor, resolve the view context of the embedded view. In other cases, resolve the parent component.

  • ng.getDirectiveMetadata(directiveOrComponentInstance...
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