At the end of [Managing Data](start/start-data "Getting Started: Managing Data"), the online store application has a product catalog and a shopping cart.
Forms in Angular build upon the standard HTML forms to help you create custom form controls and easy validation experiences. There are two parts to an Angular Reactive form: the objects that live in the component to store and manage the form, and the visualization of the form that lives in the template.
1. Angular's `FormBuilder` service provides convenient methods for generating controls. As with the other services you've used, you need to import and inject the service before you can use it:
1. To gather the user's name and address, set the `checkoutForm` property with a form model containing `name` and `address` fields, using the `FormBuilder``group()` method. Add this between the curly braces, `{}`,
1. For the checkout process, users need to submit their name and address. When they submit their order, the form should reset and the cart should clear.
1. In `cart.component.ts`, define an `onSubmit()` method to process the form. Use the `CartService``clearCart()` method to empty the cart items and reset the form after its submission. In a real-world app, this method would also submit the data to an external server. The entire cart component class is as follows:
1. Use a `formGroup` property binding to bind the `checkoutForm` to the `form` tag in the template. Also include a "Purchase" button to submit the form.
1. On the `form` tag, use an `ngSubmit` event binding to listen for the form submission and call the `onSubmit()` method with the `checkoutForm` value.
1. Add input fields for `name` and `address`. Use the `formControlName` attribute binding to bind the `checkoutForm` form controls for `name` and `address` to their input fields. The final complete component is as follows:
[Continue to the "Deployment" section](start/start-deployment "Getting Started: Deployment") to move to local development, or deploy your app to Firebase or your own server.