angular-cn/aio/content/guide/two-way-binding.md

82 lines
4.1 KiB
Markdown

# Two-way binding
Two-way binding gives components in your application a way to share data.
Use two-way binding to listen for events and update values simultaneously between parent and child components.
<div class="alert is-helpful">
See the <live-example></live-example> for a working example containing the code snippets in this guide.
</div>
## Prerequisites
To get the most out of two-way binding, you should have a basic understanding of the following concepts:
* [Property binding](guide/property-binding)
* [Event binding](guide/event-binding)
* [Inputs and Outputs](guide/inputs-outputs)
<hr>
Two-way binding combines property binding with event binding:
* [Property binding](guide/property-binding) sets a specific element property.
* [Event binding](guide/event-binding) listens for an element change event.
## Adding two-way data binding
Angular's two-way binding syntax is a combination of square brackets and parentheses, `[()]`.
The `[()]` syntax combines the brackets of property binding, `[]`, with the parentheses of event binding, `()`, as follows.
<code-example path="two-way-binding/src/app/app.component.html" header="src/app/app.component.html" region="two-way-syntax"></code-example>
## How two-way binding works
For two-way data binding to work, the `@Output()` property must use the pattern, `inputChange`, where `input` is the name of the `@Input()` property.
For example, if the `@Input()` property is `size`, the `@Output()` property must be `sizeChange`.
The following `sizerComponent` has a `size` value property and a `sizeChange` event.
The `size` property is an `@Input()`, so data can flow into the `sizerComponent`.
The `sizeChange` event is an `@Output()`, which allows data to flow out of the `sizerComponent` to the parent component.
Next, there are two methods, `dec()` to decrease the font size and `inc()` to increase the font size.
These two methods use `resize()` to change the value of the `size` property within min/max value constraints, and to emit an event that conveys the new `size` value.
<code-example path="two-way-binding/src/app/sizer/sizer.component.ts" region="sizer-component" header="src/app/sizer.component.ts"></code-example>
The `sizerComponent` template has two buttons that each bind the click event to the `inc()` and `dec()` methods.
When the user clicks one of the buttons, the `sizerComponent` calls the corresponding method.
Both methods, `inc()` and `dec()`, call the `resize()` method with a `+1` or `-1`, which in turn raises the `sizeChange` event with the new size value.
<code-example path="two-way-binding/src/app/sizer/sizer.component.html" header="src/app/sizer.component.html"></code-example>
In the `AppComponent` template, `fontSizePx` is two-way bound to the `SizerComponent`.
<code-example path="two-way-binding/src/app/app.component.html" header="src/app/app.component.html" region="two-way-1"></code-example>
In the `AppComponent`, `fontSizePx` establishes the initial `SizerComponent.size` value by setting the value to `16`.
<code-example path="two-way-binding/src/app/app.component.ts" header="src/app/app.component.ts" region="font-size"></code-example>
Clicking the buttons updates the `AppComponent.fontSizePx`.
The revised `AppComponent.fontSizePx` value updates the style binding, which makes the displayed text bigger or smaller.
The two-way binding syntax is shorthand for a combination of property binding and event binding.
The `SizerComponent` binding as separate property binding and event binding is as follows.
<code-example path="two-way-binding/src/app/app.component.html" header="src/app/app.component.html (expanded)" region="two-way-2"></code-example>
The `$event` variable contains the data of the `SizerComponent.sizeChange` event.
Angular assigns the `$event` value to the `AppComponent.fontSizePx` when the user clicks the buttons.
<div class="callout is-helpful">
<header>Two-way binding in forms</header>
Because no native HTML element follows the `x` value and `xChange` event pattern, two-way binding with form elements requires `NgModel`.
For more information on how to use two-way binding in forms, see Angular [NgModel](guide/built-in-directives#ngModel).
</div>