# Attribute directives
With attribute directives, you can change the appearance or behavior of DOM elements and Angular components.
See the for a working example containing the code snippets in this guide.
## Building an attribute directive
This section walks you through creating a highlight directive that sets the background color of the host element to yellow.
1. To create a directive, use the CLI command [`ng generate directive`](cli/generate).
ng generate directive highlight
The CLI creates `src/app/highlight.directive.ts`, a corresponding test file `src/app/highlight.directive.spec.ts`, and declares the directive class in the `AppModule`.
The CLI generates the default `src/app/highlight.directive.ts` as follows:
The `@Directive()` decorator's configuration property specifies the directive's CSS attribute selector, `[appHighlight]`.
1. Import `ElementRef` from `@angular/core`.
`ElementRef` grants direct access to the host DOM element through its `nativeElement` property.
1. Add `ElementRef` in the directive's `constructor()` to [inject](guide/dependency-injection) a reference to the host DOM element, the element to which you apply `appHighlight`.
1. Add logic to the `HighlightDirective` class that sets the background to yellow.
Directives _do not_ support namespaces.
{@a apply-directive}
## Applying an attribute directive
1. To use the `HighlightDirective`, add a `` element to the HTML template with the directive as an attribute.
Angular creates an instance of the `HighlightDirective` class and injects a reference to the `
` element into the directive's constructor, which sets the `
` element's background style to yellow.
{@a respond-to-user}
## Handling user events
This section shows you how to detect when a user mouses into or out of the element and to respond by setting or clearing the highlight color.
1. Import `HostListener` from '@angular/core'.
1. Add two event handlers that respond when the mouse enters or leaves, each with the `@HostListener()` decorator.
With the `@HostListener()` decorator, you can subscribe to events of the DOM element that hosts an attribute directive, the `
` in this case.
The handlers delegate to a helper method, `highlight()`, that sets the color on the host DOM element, `el`.
The complete directive is as follows:
The background color appears when the pointer hovers over the paragraph element and disappears as the pointer moves out.
{@a bindings}
## Passing values into an attribute directive
This section walks you through setting the highlight color while applying the `HighlightDirective`.
1. In `highlight.directive.ts`, import `Input` from `@angular/core`.
1. Add an `appHighlight` `@Input()` property.
The `@Input()` decorator adds metadata to the class that makes the directive's `appHighlight` property available for binding.
1. In `app.component.ts`, add a `color` property to the `AppComponent`.
1. To simultaneously apply the directive and the color, use property binding with the `appHighlight` directive selector, setting it equal to `color`.
The `[appHighlight]` attribute binding performs two tasks:
* applies the highlighting directive to the `` element
* sets the directive's highlight color with a property binding
### Setting the value with user input
This section guides you through adding radio buttons to bind your color choice to the `appHighlight` directive.
1. Add markup to `app.component.html` for choosing a color as follows:
1. Revise the `AppComponent.color` so that it has no initial value.
1. Serve your application to verify that the user can choose the color with the radio buttons.
{@a second-property}
## Binding to a second property
This section guides you through configuring your application so the developer can set the default color.
1. Add a second `Input()` property to `HighlightDirective` called `defaultColor`.
1. Revise the directive's `onMouseEnter` so that it first tries to highlight with the `highlightColor`, then with the `defaultColor`, and falls back to `red` if both properties are `undefined`.
1. To bind to the `AppComponent.color` and fall back to "violet" as the default color, add the following HTML.
In this case, the `defaultColor` binding doesn't use square brackets, `[]`, because it is static.
As with components, you can add multiple directive property bindings to a host element.
The default color is red if there is no default color binding.
When the user chooses a color the selected color becomes the active highlight color.
{@a ngNonBindable}
## Deactivating Angular processing with `NgNonBindable`
To prevent expression evaluation in the browser, add `ngNonBindable` to the host element.
`ngNonBindable` deactivates interpolation, directives, and binding in templates.
In the following example, the expression `{{ 1 + 1 }}` renders just as it does in your code editor, and does not display `2`.
Applying `ngNonBindable` to an element stops binding for that element's child elements.
However, `ngNonBindable` still allows directives to work on the element where you apply `ngNonBindable`.
In the following example, the `appHighlight` directive is still active but Angular does not evaluate the expression `{{ 1 + 1 }}`.
If you apply `ngNonBindable` to a parent element, Angular disables interpolation and binding of any sort, such as property binding or event binding, for the element's children.