336 lines
15 KiB
Plaintext
336 lines
15 KiB
Plaintext
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include ../../../../_includes/_util-fns
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:marked
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One of the defining features of a single page application is its manipulation
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of the DOM tree. Instead of serving a whole new page every time a user
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navigates, whole sections of the DOM appear and disappear according
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to the application state. In this chapter we'll to look at how Angular
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manipulates the DOM and how we can do it ourselves in our own directives.
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In this chapter we will
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- [learn what structural directives are](#definition)
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- [study *ngIf*](#ng-if)
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- [discover the <template> element](#template)
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- [understand the asterisk (\*) in **ngFor*](#asterisk)
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- [write our own structural directive](#unless)
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[Live example](/resources/live-examples/structural-directives/ts/plnkr.html)
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<a id="definition"></a>
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.l-main-section
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:marked
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## What are structural directives?
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There are three kinds of Angular directives:
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1. Components
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1. Attribute directives
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1. Structural directives
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The *Component* is really a directive with a template.
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It's the most common of the three directives and we write lots of them as we build our application.
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The [*Attribute* directive](attribute-directives.html) changes the appearance or behavior of an element.
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The built-in [NgStyle](template-syntax.html#ng-style) directive, for example,
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can change several element styles at the same time.
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We can use it to render text bold, italic, and lime green by binding to a
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component property that requests such a sickening result.
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A *Structural* directive changes the DOM layout by adding and removing DOM elements.
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We've seen three of the built-in structural directives in other chapters: [ngIf](template-syntax.html#ngIf),
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[ngSwitch](template-syntax.html#ngSwitch) and [ngFor](template-syntax.html#ngFor).
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+makeExample('structural-directives/ts/app/structural-directives.component.html', 'structural-directives')(format=".")
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<a id="ng-if"></a>
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.l-main-section
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:marked
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## NgIf Case Study
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Let’s focus on `ngIf`. It's a great example of a structural
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directive: it takes a boolean and makes an entire chunk of DOM appear
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or disappear.
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+makeExample('structural-directives/ts/app/structural-directives.component.html', 'ngIf')(format=".")
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:marked
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The `ngIf` directive does not hide the element.
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Using browser developer tools we can see that, when the condition is true, the top
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paragraph is in the DOM and the bottom disused paragraph is completely
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absent from the DOM! In its place are empty `<script>` tags.
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figure.image-display
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img(src='/resources/images/devguide/structural-directives/element-not-in-dom.png' alt="element not in dom")
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:marked
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### Why *remove* rather than *hide*?
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We could hide the unwanted paragraph by setting its css `display` style to `none`.
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The element would remain in the DOM while invisible. Instead we removed it with `ngIf`.
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The difference matters. When we hide an element,
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the component's behavior continues.
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It remains attached to its DOM element. It continues to listen to events.
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Angular keeps checking for changes that could affect data bindings.
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Whatever the component was doing it keeps doing.
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Although invisible, the component — and all of its descendent components —
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tie up resources that might be more useful elsewhere.
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The performance and memory burden can be substantial and the user may not benefit at all.
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On the positive side, showing the element again is very quick.
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The component's previous state is preserved and ready to display.
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The component doesn't re-initialize — an operation that could be expensive.
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`ngIf` is different.
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Setting `ngIf` to false **does** affect the component's resource consumption.
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Angular removes the element from DOM, stops change detection for the associated component,
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detaches it from DOM events (the attachments that it made) and destroys the component.
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The component can be garbage-collected (we hope) and free up memory.
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Components often have child components which themselves have children.
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All of them are destroyed when `ngIf` destroys the common ancestor.
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This cleanup effort is usually a good thing.
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Of course it isn't *always* a good thing.
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It might be a bad thing if we need that particular component again soon.
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The component's state might be expensive to re-construct.
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When `ngIf` becomes `true` again, Angular recreates the component and its subtree.
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Angular runs every component's initialization logic again. That could be expensive ... as when
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a component re-fetches data that had been in memory just moments ago.
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.l-sub-section
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:marked
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*Design thought*: minimize initialization effort and consider caching state in a
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companion service.
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:marked
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Although there are pros and cons to each approach,
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in general it is best to use `ngIf` to remove unwanted components rather than
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hide them.
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**These same considerations apply to every structural directive, whether built-in or custom.**
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We should ask ourselves — and the users of our directives — to think carefully
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about the consequences of adding and removing elements and of creating and destroying components.
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Let's see these dynamics at work. For fun, we'll stack the deck *against*
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our recommendation and consider a component called `heavy-loader` that
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***pretends*** to load a ton of data when initialized.
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We'll display two instances of the component. We toggle the visibility of the first one with CSS.
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We toggle the second into and out of the DOM with `ngIf`.
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+makeTabs(
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`structural-directives/ts/app/structural-directives.component.html,
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structural-directives/ts/app/heavy-loader.component.ts`,
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'message-log,',
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'template excerpt, heavy-loader.component.ts')
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:marked
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We also log when a component is created or destroyed
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using the built-in `ngOnInit` and `ngOnDestroy` lifecycle hooks.
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Here it is in action:
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figure.image-display
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img(src='/resources/images/devguide/structural-directives/heavy-loader-toggle.gif' alt="heavy loader toggle")
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:marked
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Both components are in the DOM at the start.
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First we toggle the component's visibility repeatedly. The component never leaves the DOM.
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When visible it's always the same instance and the log is quiet.
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Then we toggle the second component with `ngIf`.
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We create a new instance every time and the log shows that we're paying
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a heavy price to create and destroy it.
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If we really expected to "wink" the component like this, toggling visibility would be the better choice.
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In most UIs, when we "close" a component we're unlikely see it again for a long time, if ever.
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The `ngIf` would be preferred in that case.
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<a id="template"></a>
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.l-main-section
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:marked
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## The *<template>* tag
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Structural directives, like `ngIf`, do their magic by using the
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[HTML 5 template tag](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTML/Element/template).
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Outside of an Angular app, the `<template>` tag's default CSS `display` property is `none`.
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It's contents are ***invisible*** within
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a hidden [document fragment](https://developer.mozilla.org/en/docs/Web/API/DocumentFragment).
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Inside of an app, Angular ***removes*** the`<template>` tags and their children.
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The contents are gone — but not forgotten as we'll see soon.
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We can confirm these effects by wrapping the middle "hip" of the phrase "Hip! Hip! Hooray!" within a `<template>` tag.
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+makeExample('structural-directives/ts/app/structural-directives.component.html', 'template-tag')(format=".")
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:marked
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The display is a 'Hip!' short of perfect enthusiasm. The DOM effects are different when Angular is control.
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figure.image-display
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img(src='/resources/images/devguide/structural-directives/template-in-out-of-a2.png' alt="template outside angular")
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:marked
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Evidently Angular replaces the `<template>` tag and its contents with empty `<script>` tags.
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That's just its default behavior.
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It can do something different as we saw when applying a variety of `ngSwitch` directives to `<template>` tags:
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+makeExample('structural-directives/ts/app/structural-directives.component.html', 'ngSwitch')(format=".")
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:marked
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When one of those `ngSwitch` conditions is true, Angular inserts the template's content into the DOM.
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What does this have to do with `ngIf` and `ngFor`? We didn't use a `<template>` tag with those directives.
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<a id="asterisk"></a>
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.l-main-section
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:marked
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## The asterisk (\*) effect
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Here are those directives again. See the difference?
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+makeExample('structural-directives/ts/app/structural-directives.component.html', 'asterisk')(format=".")
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:marked
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We're prefixing these directive names with an asterisk (\*).
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The asterisk is "syntactic sugar". It simplifies `ngIf` and `ngFor` for both the writer and the reader.
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Under the hood, Angular replaces the asterisk version with a more verbose `<template>` form.
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The next two `ngIf` examples are effectively the same and we may write in either style:
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+makeExample('structural-directives/ts/app/structural-directives.component.html', 'ngIf-template')(format=".")
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:marked
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Most of us would rather write in style (A).
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It's worth knowing that Angular expands style (A) into style (B).
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It moves the paragraph and its contents inside a `<template>` tag.
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It moves the directive up to the `<template>` tag where it becomes a property binding,
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surrounded in square brackets. The boolean value of the host component's `condition` property
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determines whether the templated content is displayed or not.
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Angular transforms `*ngFor` in a similar manner:
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+makeExample('structural-directives/ts/app/structural-directives.component.html', 'ngFor-template')(format=".")
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:marked
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The basic pattern is the same: create a `<template>`, relocate the content,
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and move the directive onto the `<template>`.
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There are extra nuances stemming from
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Angular's [ngFor micro-syntax](template-syntax#micro-syntax) which expands
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into an additional `ngForOf` property binding (the iterable) and
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the `#hero` [local template variable](template-syntax#local-vars)
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(the current item in each iteration).
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<a id="unless"></a>
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.l-main-section
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:marked
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## Make a structural directive
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Let's write our own structural directive, an `Unless` directive, the not-so-evil twin of `ngIf`.
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Unlike `ngIf` which displays the template content when `true`,
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our directive displays the content when the condition is ***false***.
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:marked
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Creating a directive is similar to creating a component.
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* import the `Directive` decorator.
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* add a CSS **attribute selector** (in brackets) that identifies our directive.
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* specify the name of the public `input` property for binding
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(typically the name of the directive itself).
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* apply the decorator to our implementation class.
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Here is how we begin:
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+makeExample('structural-directives/ts/app/unless.directive.ts', 'unless-declaration', 'unless.directive.ts (excerpt)')(format=".")
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.l-sub-section
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:marked
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### Selector brackets [ ]
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The CSS syntax for selecting an attribute is a name in square brackets.
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We surround our directive name in square brackets. See *Directive configuration* on the [cheatsheet](cheatsheet).
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### Selector name prefixes
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We recommend picking a selector name with a prefix to ensure
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that it cannot conflict with any standard HTML attribute, now or in the future.
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We do **not** prefix our `unless` directive name with **`ng`**.
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That prefix belongs to Angular and
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we don't want to confuse our directives with their directives.
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Our prefix is `my`.
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:marked
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We'll need access to the template *and* something that can render its contents.
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We access the template with a `TemplateRef`. The renderer is a `ViewContainerRef`.
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We inject both into our constructor as private variables.
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+makeExample('structural-directives/ts/app/unless.directive.ts', 'unless-constructor')(format=".")
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:marked
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The consumer of our directive will bind a `true` | `false` value to our directive's `myUnless` input property.
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The directive adds or removes the template based on that value.
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Let's add the `myUnless` property now as a setter-only
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[definedProperty](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Object/defineProperty).
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+makeExample('structural-directives/ts/app/unless.directive.ts', 'unless-set')(format=".")
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.l-sub-section
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:marked
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The `@Input()` annotation marks this property as an input for the directive.
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:marked
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Nothing fancy here: if the condition is false,
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we render the template, otherwise we clear the element content.
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The end result should look like below:
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+makeExample('structural-directives/ts/app/unless.directive.ts', null, 'unless.directive.ts')
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:marked
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Now we add it to the `directives`array of the host component and try it.
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First we add some test HTML to the template:
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+makeExample('structural-directives/ts/app/structural-directives.component.html', 'myUnless')(format=".")
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:marked
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We run it and it behaves as expected, doing the opposite of `ngIf`.
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When `condition` is `true`, the top paragraph is removed (replaced by `<script>` tags) and the bottom paragraph appears.
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figure.image-display
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img(src='/resources/images/devguide/structural-directives/myUnless-is-true.png' alt="myUnless is true" )
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:marked
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Our `myUnless` directive is dead simple. Surely we left something out.
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Surely `ngIf` is more complex?
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[Look at the source code](https://github.com/angular/angular/blob/master/modules/angular2/src/common/directives/ng_if.ts).
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It's well documented and we shouldn't be shy
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about consulting the source when we want to know how something works.
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`ngIf` isn't much different! There are a few
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additional checks to improve performance (don't clear or recreate the
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view unless necessary) but otherwise it's much the same.
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.l-main-section
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:marked
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## Wrap up
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Here is the pertinent source for this chapter.
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+makeTabs(`
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structural-directives/ts/app/unless.directive.ts,
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structural-directives/ts/app/heavy-loader.component.ts,
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structural-directives/ts/app/structural-directives.component.ts,
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structural-directives/ts/app/structural-directives.component.html
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`,
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null,
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`unless.directive.ts,
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heavy-loader.component.ts,
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structural-directives.component.ts,
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structural-directives.component.html
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`)
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:marked
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|||
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We learned that we can manipulate our HTML layout with
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structural directives like `ngFor` and `ngIf` and we
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wrote our own structural directive, `myUnless`, to do something similar.
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Angular offers more sophisticated techniques for managing layout
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such as *structural components* that can take external content
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and incorporate that content within their own templates.
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Tab and tab pane controls are good examples.
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We'll learn about structural components in a future chapter.
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