angular-cn/aio/content/guide/sharing-ngmodules.md

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# Sharing modules
Creating shared modules allows you to organize and streamline your code. You can put commonly
used directives, pipes, and components into one module and then import just that module wherever
you need it in other parts of your app.
Consider the following module from an imaginary app:
```typescript
import { CommonModule } from '@angular/common';
import { NgModule } from '@angular/core';
import { FormsModule } from '@angular/forms';
import { CustomerComponent } from './customer.component';
import { NewItemDirective } from './new-item.directive';
import { OrdersPipe } from './orders.pipe';
@NgModule({
imports: [ CommonModule ],
declarations: [ CustomerComponent, NewItemDirective, OrdersPipe ],
exports: [ CustomerComponent, NewItemDirective, OrdersPipe,
CommonModule, FormsModule ]
})
export class SharedModule { }
```
Note the following:
* It imports the `CommonModule` because the module's component needs common directives.
* It declares and exports the utility pipe, directive, and component classes.
* It re-exports the `CommonModule` and `FormsModule`.
By re-exporting `CommonModule` and `FormsModule`, any other module that imports this
`SharedModule`, gets access to directives like `NgIf` and `NgFor` from `CommonModule`
and can bind to component properties with `[(ngModel)]`, a directive in the `FormsModule`.
Even though the components declared by `SharedModule` might not bind
with `[(ngModel)]` and there may be no need for `SharedModule`
to import `FormsModule`, `SharedModule` can still export
`FormsModule` without listing it among its `imports`. This
way, you can give other modules access to `FormsModule` without
having to import it directly into the `@NgModule` decorator.
## More on NgModules
You may also be interested in the following:
* [Providers](guide/providers).
* [Types of Feature Modules](guide/module-types).