An Angular application consists mainly of components and their HTML templates. Because the components and templates provided by Angular cannot be understood by the browser directly, Angular applications require a compilation process before they can run in a browser.
The Angular [ahead-of-time (AOT) compiler](guide/glossary#aot) converts your Angular HTML and TypeScript code into efficient JavaScript code during the build phase _before_ the browser downloads and runs that code. Compiling your application during the build process provides a faster rendering in the browser.
When you run the [`ng build`](cli/build) (build only) or [`ng serve`](cli/serve) (build and serve locally) CLI commands, the type of compilation (JIT or AOT) depends on the value of the `aot` property in your build configuration specified in `angular.json`. By default, `aot` is set to `true` for new CLI apps.
The Angular AOT compiler extracts **metadata** to interpret the parts of the application that Angular is supposed to manage.
You can specify the metadata explicitly in **decorators** such as `@Component()` and `@Input()`, or implicitly in the constructor declarations of the decorated classes.
The metadata tells Angular how to construct instances of your application classes and interact with them at runtime.
In the following example, the `@Component()` metadata object and the class constructor tell Angular how to create and display an instance of `TypicalComponent`.
The Angular compiler extracts the metadata _once_ and generates a _factory_ for `TypicalComponent`.
When it needs to create a `TypicalComponent` instance, Angular calls the factory, which produces a new visual element, bound to a new instance of the component class with its injected dependency.
In this phase, the TypeScript compiler and *AOT collector* create a representation of the source. The collector does not attempt to interpret the metadata it collects. It represents the metadata as best it can and records errors when it detects a metadata syntax violation.
* Phase 2 is *code generation*.
In this phase, the compiler's `StaticReflector` interprets the metadata collected in phase 1, performs additional validation of the metadata, and throws an error if it detects a metadata restriction violation.
* Phase 3 is *template type checking*.
In this optional phase, the Angular *template compiler* uses the TypeScript compiler to validate the binding expressions in templates. You can enable this phase explicitly by setting the `fullTemplateTypeCheck` configuration option; see [Angular compiler options](guide/angular-compiler-options).
For additional guidelines and instructions on preparing an application for AOT compilation, see [Angular: Writing AOT-friendly applications](https://medium.com/sparkles-blog/angular-writing-aot-friendly-applications-7b64c8afbe3f).
You can provide options in the [TypeScript configuration file](guide/typescript-configuration) that controls the compilation process. See [Angular compiler options](guide/angular-compiler-options) for a complete list of available options.
The TypeScript compiler does some of the analytic work of the first phase. It emits the `.d.ts`_type definition files_ with type information that the AOT compiler needs to generate application code.
At the same time, the AOT **collector** analyzes the metadata recorded in the Angular decorators and outputs metadata information in **`.metadata.json`** files, one per `.d.ts` file.
You can think of `.metadata.json` as a diagram of the overall structure of a decorator's metadata, represented as an [abstract syntax tree (AST)](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abstract_syntax_tree).
If you want `ngc` to report syntax errors immediately rather than produce a `.metadata.json` file with errors, set the `strictMetadataEmit` option in the TypeScript configuration file.
Angular libraries have this option to ensure that all Angular `.metadata.json` files are clean and it is a best practice to do the same when building your own libraries.
The compiler can only resolve references to **_exported_** symbols.
The collector, however, can evaluate an expression during collection and record the result in the `.metadata.json`, rather than the original expression.
This allows you to make limited use of non-exported symbols within expressions.
The collector can evaluate references to module-local `const` declarations and initialized `var` and `let` declarations, effectively removing them from the `.metadata.json` file.
There is no longer a reference to `template` and, therefore, nothing to trouble the compiler when it later interprets the _collector's_ output in `.metadata.json`.
If an expression is not foldable, the collector writes it to `.metadata.json` as an [AST](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abstract_syntax_tree) for the compiler to resolve.
The compiler understands all syntax forms that the collector supports, but it may reject _syntactically_ correct metadata if the _semantics_ violate compiler rules.
The compiler can only create instances of certain classes, supports only core decorators, and only supports calls to macros (functions or static methods) that return expressions.
You can call the `wrapInArray` in a metadata definition because it returns the value of an expression that conforms to the compiler's restrictive JavaScript subset.
The Angular [`RouterModule`](api/router/RouterModule) exports two macro static methods, `forRoot` and `forChild`, to help declare root and child routes.
Review the [source code](https://github.com/angular/angular/blob/master/packages/router/src/router_module.ts#L139 "RouterModule.forRoot source code")
The compiler treats object literals containing the fields `useClass`, `useValue`, `useFactory`, and `data` specially, converting the expression initializing one of these fields into an exported variable that replaces the expression.
This process of rewriting these expressions removes all the restrictions on what can be in them because
The compiler does the rewriting during the emit of the `.js` file.
It does not, however, rewrite the `.d.ts` file, so TypeScript doesn't recognize it as being an export. and it does not interfere with the ES module's exported API.
One of the Angular compiler's most helpful features is the ability to type-check expressions within templates, and catch any errors before they cause crashes at runtime.
Enable this phase explicitly by adding the compiler option `"fullTemplateTypeCheck"` in the `"angularCompilerOptions"` of the project's TypeScript configuration file
In [Angular Ivy](guide/ivy), the template type checker has been completely rewritten to be more capable as well as stricter, meaning it can catch a variety of new errors that the previous type checker would not detect.
As a result, templates that previously compiled under View Engine can fail type checking under Ivy. This can happen because Ivy's stricter checking catches genuine errors, or because application code is not typed correctly, or because the application uses libraries in which typings are inaccurate or not specific enough.
This stricter type checking is not enabled by default in version 9, but can be enabled by setting the `strictTemplates` configuration option.
We do expect to make strict type checking the default in the future.
For more information about type-checking options, and about improvements to template type checking in version 9 and above, see [Template type checking](guide/template-typecheck).
The file name reported in the error message, `my.component.ts.MyComponent.html`, is a synthetic file
generated by the template compiler that holds contents of the `MyComponent` class template.
The compiler never writes this file to disk.
The line and column numbers are relative to the template string in the `@Component` annotation of the class, `MyComponent` in this case.
If a component uses `templateUrl` instead of `template`, the errors are reported in the HTML file referenced by the `templateUrl` instead of a synthetic file.
The expression used in an `ngIf` directive is used to narrow type unions in the Angular
template compiler, the same way the `if` expression does in TypeScript.
For example, to avoid `Object is possibly 'undefined'` error in the template above, modify it to only emit the interpolation if the value of `person` is initialized as shown below:
For more information about input type narrowing, see [Input setter coercion](guide/template-typecheck#input-setter-coercion) and [Improving template type checking for custom directives](guide/structural-directives#directive-type-checks).
Use the [non-null type assertion operator](guide/template-syntax#non-null-assertion-operator) to suppress the `Object is possibly 'undefined'` error when it is inconvenient to use `*ngIf` or when some constraint in the component ensures that the expression is always non-null when the binding expression is interpolated.
In the following example, the `person` and `address` properties are always set together, implying that `address` is always non-null if `person` is non-null.
There is no convenient way to describe this constraint to TypeScript and the template compiler, but the error is suppressed in the example by using `address!.street`.