) Angular 2: an MIT Open Source Licensed Framework
p As of beta.2 this week, we're moving Angular 2, its related libraries, and any code snippets and examples to the MIT license. Open source licenses are meant to protect developers by making it clear how code can be used. We want developers to be confident that they can use, fork...
p We're ecstatic to announce that we've reached Angular 2 Beta. You can read about many of the improvements over Angular 1 in a recent post. Get started learning Angular 2 now at angular.io. What does 'beta' mean? Beta means we're now confident that most developers can be successful building large applications using Angular 2....
p Some people seem to be confused why Angular 2 seems to favor the Observable abstraction over the Promise abstraction when it comes to dealing with async behavior. There are pretty good resources about the difference between Observables and Promises already out there.
p How to use Redux in Angular 2 Applications. Redux, now in version 3, has been around less than a year but it has proved very successful. Inspired by Flux and Elm, is used to handle Application state and bind it to the User Interface in a very effective way. Redux also enables cool features
p Dans ce dernier épisode, nous allons voir comment des patrons de conception tels que le Module Pattern ou l’Observer sont utilisés dans AngularJS. Cet article fait partie d’une série d’articles consacrés à l’utilisation des patrons de conceptions par et dans les composants d’AngularJS...
p The new dependency injection system in Angular 2 comes with a feature called “Multi Providers” that basically enable us, the consumer of the platform, to hook into certain operations and plug in custom functionality we might need in our application