In the event that a directive or component is extended by a class without a decorator, the schematic copies any inherited directive or component metadata to the derived class.
When the decorator is missing from the parent class, the subclass will inherit a constructor from a class for which the compiler did not generate special constructor info (because it was not decorated as a directive).
When Angular then tries to create the subclass, it doesn't have the correct info to create it.
When the child class is missing the decorator, the child class inherits from the parent class yet has no decorators of its own.
Without a decorator, the compiler has no way of knowing that the class is a `@Directive` or `@Component`, so it doesn't generate the proper instructions for the directive.
In ViewEngine, base classes with field decorators like `@Input()` worked even when the class did not have a `@Directive()` or `@Component()` decorator.
However, this example won't compile with Ivy because the `Base` class _requires_ either a `@Directive()` or `@Component()` decorator to generate code for inputs, outputs, queries, and host bindings.
The presence of the `@Directive` decorator causes Angular to generate extra code for the affected class.
If that decorator includes no properties (metadata), the directive won't be matched to elements or instantiated directly, but other classes that _extend_ the directive class will inherit this generated code.
If you're using dependency injection, or any Angular-specific feature, such as `@HostBinding()`, `@ViewChild()`, or `@Input()`, you need a `@Directive()` or `@Component()` decorator.
The decorator lets the compiler know to generate the correct instructions to create that class and any classes that extend it.
If you don't want to use that base class as a directive directly, leave the selector blank.
If you do want it to be usable independently, fill in the metadata as usual.
As support for selectorless decorators is introduced in Angular version 9, if you want to support Angular version 8 and earlier, you shouldn't add a selectorless `@Directive()` decorator.
You can either add `@Directive()` with a selector or move the Angular-specific features to affected subclasses.