docs(toh): put a bit of clarification

closes #1352
This commit is contained in:
Foxandxss 2016-05-10 19:49:54 +02:00 committed by Ward Bell
parent 156b6f42ee
commit 33b5829b25
2 changed files with 5 additions and 41 deletions

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@ -171,7 +171,7 @@ code-example(format=".")
:marked
The `AppComponent`s template should now look like this
+makeExample('toh-3/ts/app/app.component.ts', 'hero-detail-template', 'app.component.ts (Template)')
+makeExample('toh-3/ts/app/app.component.ts', 'hero-detail-template', 'app.component.ts (Template)')(format='.')
:marked
Thanks to the binding, the `HeroDetailComponent` should receive the hero from the `AppComponent` and display that hero's detail beneath the list.
The detail should update every time the user picks a new hero.
@ -189,8 +189,7 @@ code-example(format=".")
We tell Angular about it by listing it in the metadata `directives` array. Let's add that array property to the bottom of the
`@Component` configuration object, immediately after the `template` and `styles` properties.
+makeExample('toh-3/ts/app/app.component.ts', 'directives')
+makeExample('toh-3/ts/app/app.component.ts', 'directives', 'app/app.component.ts (Directives)')
:marked
### It works!

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@ -167,7 +167,7 @@ code-example(format="." language="bash").
### Inject the *HeroService*
Two lines replace the one line of *new*:
Two lines replace the one line that created with *new*:
1. we add a constructor.
1. we add to the component's `providers` metadata
@ -179,11 +179,6 @@ code-example(format="." language="bash").
:marked
Now Angular will know to supply an instance of the `HeroService` when it creates a new `AppComponent`.
Angular has to get that instance from somewhere. That's the role of the Angular *Dependency Injector*.
The **Injector** has a **container** of previously created services.
Either it finds and returns a pre-existing `HeroService` from its container or it creates a new instance, adds
it to the container, and returns it to Angular.
.l-sub-section
:marked
Learn more about Dependency Injection in the [Dependency Injection](../guide/dependency-injection.html) chapter.
@ -201,22 +196,7 @@ code-example(format="." language="html").
:marked
The `providers` array tells Angular to create a fresh instance of the `HeroService` when it creates a new `AppComponent`.
The `AppComponent` can use that service to get heroes and so can every child component of its component tree.
<a id="child-component"></a>
.l-sub-section
:marked
### Services and the component tree
Recall that the `AppComponent` creates an instance of `HeroDetail` by virtue of the
`<my-hero-detail>` tag at the bottom of its template. That `HeroDetail` is a child of the `AppComponent`.
If the `HeroDetailComponent` needed its parent component's `HeroService`,
it would ask Angular to inject the service into its constructor which would look just like the one for `AppComponent`:
+makeExample('toh-4/ts/app/app.component.1.ts', 'ctor', 'hero-detail.component.ts (constructor)')
:marked
The `HeroDetailComponent` must *not* repeat its parent's `providers` array! Guess [why](#shadow-provider).
The `AppComponent` is the top level component of our application.
There should be only one instance of that component and only one instance of the `HeroService` in our entire app.
a#child-component
:marked
### *getHeroes* in the *AppComponent*
We've got the service in a `heroService` private variable. Let's use it.
@ -384,18 +364,3 @@ code-example(format="." language="html").
Back in the `AppComponent`, replace `heroService.getHeroes` with `heroService.getHeroesSlowly`
and see how the app behaves.
.l-main-section
<a id="shadow-provider"></a>
:marked
### Appendix: Shadowing the parent's service
We stated [earlier](#child-component) that if we injected the parent `AppComponent` `HeroService`
into the `HeroDetailComponent`, *we must not add a providers array* to the `HeroDetailComponent` metadata.
Why? Because that tells Angular to create a new instance of the `HeroService` at the `HeroDetailComponent` level.
The `HeroDetailComponent` doesn't want its *own* service instance; it wants its *parent's* service instance.
Adding the `providers` array creates a new service instance that shadows the parent instance.
Think carefully about where and when to register a provider.
Understand the scope of that registration. Be careful not to create a new service instance at the wrong level.