# Using Web Workers with Angular CLI [Web Workers](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/Web_Workers_API) allow you to run CPU intensive computations in a background thread, freeing the main thread to update the user interface. If you find your application becomes unresponsive while processing data, using Web Workers can help. ## Adding a Web Worker You can add a web worker anywhere in your application. If the file that contains your expensive computation is `src/app/app.component.ts`, you can add a Web Worker using `ng generate web-worker app`. Running this command will: - configure your project to use Web Workers, if it isn't already. - add `src/app/app.worker.ts` with scaffolded code to receive messages: addEventListener('message', ({ data }) => { const response = `worker response to ${data}`; postMessage(response); }); - add scaffolded code to `src/app/app.component.ts` to use the worker: if (typeof Worker !== 'undefined') { // Create a new const worker = new Worker('./app.worker', { type: 'module' }); worker.onmessage = ({ data }) => { console.log(`page got message: ${data}`); }; worker.postMessage('hello'); } else { // Web Workers are not supported in this environment. // You should add a fallback so that your program still executes correctly. } After the initial scaffolding, you will need to refactor your code to use the Web Worker by sending messages to and from. ## Caveats There are two important things to keep in mind when using Web Workers in Angular projects: - Some environments or platforms, like `@angular/platform-server` used in [Server-side Rendering](guide/universal), don't support Web Workers. You have to provide a fallback mechanism to perform the computations that the worker would perform to ensure your application will work in these environments. - Running Angular itself in a Web Worker via [**@angular/platform-webworker**](api/platform-webworker) is not yet supported in Angular CLI.