# Getting Started with Angular: Your First App Welcome to Angular! This tutorial introduces you to the essentials of Angular by walking you through building a simple e-commerce site with a catalog, shopping cart, and check-out form. It uses the [StackBlitz](https://stackblitz.com/ "StackBlitz website") online development environment so you can get started right away.
This guide uses the StackBlitz Generator to show you a ready-made, simple application that you can examine and play with interactively. In actual development you will typically use the [Angular CLI](guide/glossary#command-line-interface-cli), a powerful command-line tool that lets you generate and modify applications. For more information, see the [CLI Overview](cli).
New to web development?
There are many resources to complement the Angular docs. Mozilla's MDN docs include both [HTML](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Learn/HTML "Learning HTML: Guides and tutorials") and [JavaScript](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript "JavaScript") introductions. [TypeScript's docs](https://www.typescriptlang.org/docs/home.html "TypeScript documentation") include a 5-minute tutorial. Various online course platforms, such as [Udemy](http://www.udemy.com "Udemy online courses") and [Codecademy](https://www.codecademy.com/ "Codecademy online courses"), also cover web development basics.
{@a new-project} ## Create a new project

Click here to create a new project in StackBlitz.

StackBlitz creates a starter Angular app with a top bar—containing the store name and checkout icon—and the title for a product list.
StackBlitz tips
* Log into StackBlitz so you can save and resume your work. If you have a GitHub account, you can log into StackBlitz with that account. In order to save your progress, first fork the project using the Fork button at the top left, then you'll be able to save your work to your own StackBlitz account by clicking the Save button. * To copy a code example from this tutorial, click the icon at the top right of the code example box, and then paste the code snippet from the clipboard into StackBlitz. * If the StackBlitz preview pane isn't showing what you expect, save and then click the refresh button. * StackBlitz is continually improving, so there may be slight differences in generated code, but the app's behavior will be the same.
{@a template-syntax} ## Template syntax Angular's template syntax extends HTML and JavaScript. This section introduces template syntax by enhancing the "Products" area.
To help you get going, the following steps use predefined product data and methods from the `product-list.component.ts` file.
1. In the `product-list` folder, open the template file `product-list.component.html`. 1. Modify the product list template to display a list of product names. 1. Each product in the list displays the same way, one after another on the page. To iterate over the predefined list of products, put the `*ngFor` directive on a `
`, as follows: With `*ngFor`, the `
` repeats for each product in the list.
`*ngFor` is a "structural directive". Structural directives shape or reshape the DOM's structure, typically by adding, removing, and manipulating the elements to which they are attached. Any directive with an asterisk, `*`, is a structural directive.
1. To display the names of the products, use the interpolation syntax `{{ }}`. Interpolation renders a property's value as text. Inside the `
`, add an `

` to display the interpolation of the product's name property: The preview pane immediately updates to display the name of each product in the list. 1. To make each product name a link to product details, add the `` element and set its title to be the product's name by using the property binding `[ ]` syntax, as follows: In the preview pane, hold the pointer over a product name to see the bound name property value, which is the product name plus the word "details". Interpolation `{{ }}` lets you render the property value as text; property binding `[ ]` lets you use the property value in a template expression. 1. Add the product descriptions. On the `

` element, use an `*ngIf` directive so that Angular only creates the `

` element if the current product has a description. The app now displays the name and description of each product in the list. Notice that the final product does not have a description paragraph. Because the product's description property is empty, Angular doesn't create the `

` element—including the word "Description".

1. Add a button so users can share a product with friends. Bind the button's `click` event to the `share()` method (in `product-list.component.ts`). Event binding uses a set of parentheses, `( )`, around the event, as in the following `