11 KiB
Displaying Data
You can display data by binding controls in an HTML template to properties of an Angular component.
In this page, you'll create a component with a list of heroes. You'll display the list of hero names and conditionally show a message below the list.
The final UI looks like this:
The demonstrates all of the syntax and code snippets described in this page.
{@a interpolation}
Showing component properties with interpolation
The easiest way to display a component property
is to bind the property name through interpolation.
With interpolation, you put the property name in the view template, enclosed in double curly braces: {{myHero}}
.
Follow the quickstart instructions for creating a new project
named displaying-data
.
Delete the app.component.html
file. It is not needed for this example.
Then modify the app.component.ts
file by
changing the template and the body of the component.
When you're done, it should look like this:
You added two properties to the formerly empty component: title
and myHero
.
The template displays the two component properties using double curly brace interpolation:
The template is a multi-line string within ECMAScript 2015 backticks (`
).
The backtick (`
)—which is not the same character as a single
quote ('
)—allows you to compose a string over several lines, which makes the
HTML more readable.
Angular automatically pulls the value of the title
and myHero
properties from the component and
inserts those values into the browser. Angular updates the display
when these properties change.
More precisely, the redisplay occurs after some kind of asynchronous event related to the view, such as a keystroke, a timer completion, or a response to an HTTP request.
Notice that you don't call new to create an instance of the AppComponent
class.
Angular is creating an instance for you. How?
The CSS selector
in the @Component
decorator specifies an element named <app-root>
.
That element is a placeholder in the body of your index.html
file:
When you bootstrap with the AppComponent
class (in main.ts
), Angular looks for a <app-root>
in the index.html
, finds it, instantiates an instance of AppComponent
, and renders it
inside the <app-root>
tag.
Now run the app. It should display the title and hero name:
The next few sections review some of the coding choices in the app.
Template inline or template file?
You can store your component's template in one of two places.
You can define it inline using the template
property, or you can define
the template in a separate HTML file and link to it in
the component metadata using the @Component
decorator's templateUrl
property.
The choice between inline and separate HTML is a matter of taste, circumstances, and organization policy. Here the app uses inline HTML because the template is small and the demo is simpler without the additional HTML file.
In either style, the template data bindings have the same access to the component's properties.
By default, the Angular CLI generates components with a template file. You can override that with:
ng generate component hero -itConstructor or variable initialization?
Although this example uses variable assignment to initialize the components, you could instead declare and initialize the properties using a constructor:
This app uses more terse "variable assignment" style simply for brevity.
{@a ngFor}
Showing an array property with *ngFor
To display a list of heroes, begin by adding an array of hero names to the component and redefine myHero
to be the first name in the array.
Now use the Angular ngFor
directive in the template to display
each item in the heroes
list.
This UI uses the HTML unordered list with <ul>
and <li>
tags. The *ngFor
in the <li>
element is the Angular "repeater" directive.
It marks that <li>
element (and its children) as the "repeater template":
Don't forget the leading asterisk (*) in *ngFor
. It is an essential part of the syntax.
For more information, see the Template Syntax page.
Notice the hero
in the ngFor
double-quoted instruction;
it is an example of a template input variable. Read
more about template input variables in the microsyntax section of
the Template Syntax page.
Angular duplicates the <li>
for each item in the list, setting the hero
variable
to the item (the hero) in the current iteration. Angular uses that variable as the
context for the interpolation in the double curly braces.
In this case, ngFor
is displaying an array, but ngFor
can
repeat items for any iterable object.
Now the heroes appear in an unordered list.
Creating a class for the data
The app's code defines the data directly inside the component, which isn't best practice. In a simple demo, however, it's fine.
At the moment, the binding is to an array of strings. In real applications, most bindings are to more specialized objects.
To convert this binding to use specialized objects, turn the array
of hero names into an array of Hero
objects. For that you'll need a Hero
class:
With the following code:
You've defined a class with a constructor and two properties: id
and name
.
It might not look like the class has properties, but it does. The declaration of the constructor parameters takes advantage of a TypeScript shortcut.
Consider the first parameter:
That brief syntax does a lot:
- Declares a constructor parameter and its type.
- Declares a public property of the same name.
- Initializes that property with the corresponding argument when creating an instance of the class.
Using the Hero class
After importing the Hero
class, the AppComponent.heroes
property can return a typed array
of Hero
objects:
Next, update the template.
At the moment it displays the hero's id
and name
.
Fix that to display only the hero's name
property.
The display looks the same, but the code is clearer.
{@a ngIf}
Conditional display with NgIf
Sometimes an app needs to display a view or a portion of a view only under specific circumstances.
Let's change the example to display a message if there are more than three heroes.
The Angular ngIf
directive inserts or removes an element based on a truthy/falsy condition.
To see it in action, add the following paragraph at the bottom of the template:
Don't forget the leading asterisk (*) in *ngIf
. It is an essential part of the syntax.
Read more about ngIf
and *
in the ngIf section of the Template Syntax page.
The template expression inside the double quotes,
*ngIf="heroes.length > 3"
, looks and behaves much like TypeScript.
When the component's list of heroes has more than three items, Angular adds the paragraph
to the DOM and the message appears. If there are three or fewer items, Angular omits the
paragraph, so no message appears. For more information,
see the template expressions section of the
Template Syntax page.
Angular isn't showing and hiding the message. It is adding and removing the paragraph element from the DOM. That improves performance, especially in larger projects when conditionally including or excluding big chunks of HTML with many data bindings.
Try it out. Because the array has four items, the message should appear.
Go back into app.component.ts"
and delete or comment out one of the elements from the hero array.
The browser should refresh automatically and the message should disappear.
Summary
Now you know how to use:
- Interpolation with double curly braces to display a component property.
- ngFor to display an array of items.
- A TypeScript class to shape the model data for your component and display properties of that model.
- ngIf to conditionally display a chunk of HTML based on a boolean expression.
Here's the final code: