373 lines
		
	
	
		
			16 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Plaintext
		
	
	
	
	
	
			
		
		
	
	
			373 lines
		
	
	
		
			16 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Plaintext
		
	
	
	
	
	
block includes
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  include ../_util-fns
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:marked
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  An **Attribute** directive changes the appearance or behavior of a DOM element.
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:marked
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  In this chapter we will
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  * [write an attribute directive to change the background color](#write-directive)
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  * [apply the attribute directive to an element in a template](#apply-directive)
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  * [respond to user-initiated events](#respond-to-user)
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  * [pass values into the directive using data binding](#bindings)
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  Try the <live-example></live-example>.
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  ## Directives overview
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  There are three kinds of directives in Angular:
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  1. Components
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  1. Structural directives  
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  1. Attribute directives
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  A *Component* is really a directive with a template. 
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  It's the most common of the three directives and we tend to write lots of them as we build applications.
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  [*Structural* directives](structural-directives.html) can change the DOM layout by adding and removing DOM elements. 
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  [NgFor](template-syntax.html#ngFor) and [NgIf](template-syntax.html#ngIf) are two familiar examples.
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  An *Attribute* directive can change the appearance or behavior of an element.
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  The built-in [NgStyle](template-syntax.html#ngStyle) directive, for example,
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  can change several element styles at the same time.
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  We are going to write our own attribute directive to set an element's background color
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  when the user hovers over that element.
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.l-sub-section
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  :marked
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    We don't need *any* directive to simply set the background color.
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    We can set it with the special [Style Binding](template-syntax.html#style-binding) like this:
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  +makeExample('attribute-directives/ts/app/app.component.1.html','p-style-background')
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  :marked
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    That wouldn't be nearly as much fun as creating our own directive.
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    Besides, we're not just *setting* the color; we'll be *changing* the color
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    in response to a user action, a mouse hover.
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.l-main-section
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a#write-directive
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:marked
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  ## Build a simple attribute directive
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  An attribute directive minimally requires building a controller class annotated with 
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  `@Directive`, which specifies the selector identifying
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  the attribute associated with the directive. 
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  The controller class implements the desired directive behavior.
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  Let's build a small illustrative example together.
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:marked
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  ### Our first draft
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  Create a new project folder (`attribute-directives`) and follow the steps in the [QuickStart](../quickstart.html).
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include ../_quickstart_repo
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:marked
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  Create the following source file in the indicated folder with the given code:
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+makeExample('app/highlight.directive.1.ts')
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block highlight-directive-1
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  :marked
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    We begin by importing some symbols from the Angular `core`.
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    We need the `Directive` symbol for the `@Directive` decorator.
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    We need the `ElementRef` to [inject](dependency-injection.html) into the directive's constructor
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    so we can access the DOM element.
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    We don't need `Input` immediately but we will need it later in the chapter.
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    Then we define the directive metadata in a configuration object passed
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    as an argument to the `@Directive` decorator function. 
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:marked
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  `@Directive` requires a CSS selector to identify
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  the HTML in the template that is associated with our directive.
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  The [CSS selector for an attribute](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/CSS/Attribute_selectors)
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  is the attribute name in square brackets.
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  Our directive's selector is `[myHighlight]`. 
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  Angular will locate all elements in the template that have an attribute named `myHighlight`. 
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.l-sub-section
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  :marked
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    ### Why not call it "highlight"?
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    *highlight* is a nicer name than *myHighlight* and, technically, it would work if we called it that.
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    However, we recommend picking a selector name with a prefix to ensure
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    that it cannot conflict with any standard HTML attribute, now or in the future.
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    There is also less risk of colliding with a third-party directive name when we give ours a prefix.
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    We do **not** prefix our `highlight` directive name with **`ng`**.
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    That prefix belongs to Angular.
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    We need a prefix of our own, preferably short, and `my` will do for now.
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p
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  | After the #[code @Directive] metadata comes the directive's controller class, which contains the logic for the directive. 
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  +ifDocsFor('ts')
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    | We export `HighlightDirective` to make it accessible to other components.
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:marked
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  Angular creates a new instance of the directive's controller class for
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  each matching element, injecting an Angular `ElementRef` 
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  into the constructor.
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  `ElementRef` is a service that grants us direct access to the DOM element
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  through its `nativeElement` property.
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  That's all we need to set the element's background color using the browser DOM API.
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.l-main-section
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a#apply-directive
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:marked
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  ## Apply the attribute directive
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  The `AppComponent` in this sample is a test harness for our `HighlightDirective`.
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  Let's give it a new template that 
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  applies the directive as an attribute to a paragraph (`p`) element.
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  In Angular terms, the `<p>` element will be the attribute **host**.
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p
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  | We'll put the template in its own 
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  code #[+adjExPath('app.component.html')]
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  | file that looks like this:
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+makeExample('attribute-directives/ts/app/app.component.1.html',null,'app/app.component.html')(format=".")
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:marked
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  A separate template file is clearly overkill for a 2-line template. 
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  Hang in there; we're going to expand it later.
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  Meanwhile, we'll revise the `AppComponent` to reference this template.
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+makeExample('attribute-directives/ts/app/app.component.ts',null,'app/app.component.ts')
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:marked
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  We've added an `import` statement to fetch the 'Highlight' directive and, 
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  added that class to a `directives` component metadata so that Angular 
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  will recognize our directive when it encounters `myHighlight` in the template. 
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  We run the app and see that our directive highlights the paragraph text.
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figure.image-display
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  img(src="/resources/images/devguide/attribute-directives/first-highlight.png" alt="First Highlight")
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.l-sub-section
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  :marked
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    ### Your directive isn't working? 
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    Did you remember to set the `directives` attribute of `@Component`? It is easy to forget!
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    Open the console in the browser tools and look for an error like this:
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  code-example(format="nocode").
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    EXCEPTION: Template parse errors:
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      Can't bind to 'myHighlight' since it isn't a known native property
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  :marked
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    Angular detects that we're trying to bind to *something* but it doesn't know what.
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    We have to tell it by listing `HighlightDirective` in the `directives` metadata array.
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:marked
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  Let's recap what happened.
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  Angular found the `myHighlight` attribute on the `<p>` element. It created
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  an instance of the `HighlightDirective` class, 
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  injecting a reference to the element into the constructor 
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  where we set the `<p>` element's background style to yellow.
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.l-main-section
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a#respond-to-user
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:marked
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  ## Respond to user action
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  We are not satisfied to simply set an element color.
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  Our directive should set the color in response to a user action.
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  Specifically, we want to set the color when the user hovers over an element.
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  We'll need to
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  1. detect when the user hovers into and out of the element,
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  2. respond to those actions by setting and clearing the highlight color, respectively.
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  We apply the `@HostListener` !{_decorator} to methods which are called when an event is raised.
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+makeExample('attribute-directives/ts/app/highlight.directive.2.ts','host')(format=".")
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.l-sub-section
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  :marked
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    The `@HostListener` !{_decorator} refers to the DOM element that hosts our attribute directive, the `<p>` in our case.
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    We could have attached event listeners by manipulating the host DOM element directly, but
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    there are at least three problems with such an approach:
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    1. We have to write the listeners correctly.
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    1. We must *detach* our listener when the directive is destroyed to avoid memory leaks.
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    1. We'd be talking to DOM API directly which, we learned, is something to avoid.
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    Let's roll with the `@HostListener` !{_decorator}. 
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:marked
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  Now we implement the two mouse event handlers:
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+makeExample('attribute-directives/ts/app/highlight.directive.2.ts','mouse-methods')(format=".")
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:marked
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  Notice that they delegate to a helper method that sets the color via a private local variable, `#{_priv}el`.
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  We revise the constructor to capture the `ElementRef.nativeElement` in this variable.
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+makeExample('attribute-directives/ts/app/highlight.directive.2.ts','ctor')(format=".")
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:marked
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  Here's the updated directive:
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+makeExample('app/highlight.directive.2.ts')
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:marked
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  We run the app and confirm that the background color appears as we move the mouse over the `p` and
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  disappears as we move out.
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figure.image-display
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  img(src="/resources/images/devguide/attribute-directives/highlight-directive-anim.gif" alt="Second Highlight")
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.l-main-section
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a#bindings
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:marked
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  ## Configure the directive with binding
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  Currently the highlight color is hard-coded within the directive. That's inflexible.
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  We should set the color externally with a binding like this:
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+makeExample('attribute-directives/ts/app/app.component.html','pHost')
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:marked
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  We'll extend our directive class with a bindable **input** `highlightColor` property and use it when we highlight text.
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  Here is the final version of the class:
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+makeExcerpt('app/highlight.directive.ts', 'class')
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a#input
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:marked
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  The new `highlightColor` property is called an *input* property because data flows from the binding expression into our directive.
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  Notice the `@Input()` #{_decorator} applied to the property.
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+makeExcerpt('app/highlight.directive.ts', 'color')
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:marked
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  `@Input` adds metadata to the class that makes the `highlightColor` property available for 
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  property binding under the `myHighlight` alias. 
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  We must add this input metadata or Angular will reject the binding.
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  See the [appendix](#why-input) below to learn why.
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.l-sub-section
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  :marked
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    ### @Input(_alias_) 
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    The developer who uses this directive expects to bind to the attribute name, `myHighlight`.
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    The directive property name is `highlightColor`. That's a disconnect.
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    We could resolve the discrepancy by renaming the property to `myHighlight` and define it as follows:
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  +makeExcerpt('app/highlight.directive.ts', 'highlight', '')
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  :marked
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    Maybe we don't want that property name inside the directive perhaps because it 
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    doesn't express our intention well. 
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    We can **alias** the `highlightColor` property with the attribute name by
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    passing `myHighlight` into the `@Input` #{_decorator}:
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  +makeExcerpt('app/highlight.directive.ts', 'color', '')
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:marked
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  Now that we're getting the highlight color as an input, we modify the `onMouseEnter()` method to use
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  it instead of the hard-coded color name.
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  We also define red as the default color to fallback on in case
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  the user neglects to bind with a color.
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+makeExcerpt('attribute-directives/ts/app/highlight.directive.ts', 'mouse-enter', '')
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:marked
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  Now we'll update our `AppComponent` template to let 
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  users pick the highlight color and bind their choice to our directive.
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  Here is the updated template:
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+makeExcerpt('attribute-directives/ts/app/app.component.html', 'v2', '')
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.l-sub-section
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  :marked
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    ### Where is the templated *color* property?
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    The eagle-eyed may notice that the radio button click handlers in the template set a `color` property
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    and we are binding that `color` to the directive. 
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    We should expect to find a `color` on the host `AppComponent`.
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    **We never defined a color property for the host *AppComponent***!
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    And yet this code works. Where is the template `color` value going?
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    Browser debugging reveals that Angular dynamically added a `color` property 
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    to the runtime instance of the `AppComponent`.
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    This is *convenient* behavior but it is also *implicit* behavior that could be confusing. 
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    While it's cool that this technique works, we recommend adding the `color` property to the `AppComponent`.
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:marked
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  Here is our second version of the directive in action.
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figure.image-display
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  img(src="/resources/images/devguide/attribute-directives/highlight-directive-v2-anim.gif" alt="Highlight v.2")
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.l-main-section
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:marked
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  ## Bind to a second property
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  Our directive only has a single, customizable property. What if we had ***two properties***?
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  Let's allow the template developer to set the default color, the color that prevails until the user picks a highlight color.
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  We'll add a second **input** property to `HighlightDirective` called `defaultColor`:
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+makeExample('attribute-directives/ts/app/highlight.directive.ts', 'defaultColor')(format=".")
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:marked
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  The `defaultColor` property has a setter that overrides the hard-coded default color, "red".
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  We don't need a getter.
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  How do we bind to it? We already "burned" the `myHighlight` attribute name as a binding target.
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  Remember that a *component is a directive too*. 
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  We can add as many component property bindings as we need by stringing them along in the template
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  as in this example that sets the `a`, `b`, `c` properties to the string literals 'a', 'b', and 'c'. 
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code-example(format="." ).
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  <my-component [a]="'a'" [b]="'b'" [c]="'c'"><my-component>
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:marked
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  We do the same thing with an attribute directive.
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+makeExample('attribute-directives/ts/app/app.component.html', 'defaultColor')(format=".")
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:marked
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  Here we're binding the user's color choice to the `myHighlight` attribute as we did before.
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  We're *also* binding the literal string, 'violet', to the `defaultColor`.
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  Here is the final version of the directive in action.
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figure.image-display
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  img(src="/resources/images/devguide/attribute-directives/highlight-directive-final-anim.gif" alt="Final Highlight")
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.l-main-section
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:marked
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  ## Summary
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  We now know how to
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  - [build a simple **attribute directive** to attach behavior to an HTML element](#write-directive),
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  - [use that directive in a template](#apply-directive),
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  - [respond to **events** to change behavior based on an event](#respond-to-user),
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  - and [use **binding** to pass values to the attribute directive](#bindings).
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  The final source:
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+makeTabs(
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  `attribute-directives/ts/app/app.component.ts,
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   attribute-directives/ts/app/app.component.html, 
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   attribute-directives/ts/app/highlight.directive.ts,
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   attribute-directives/ts/app/main.ts,
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   attribute-directives/ts/index.html
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  `,
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  ',,full',
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  `app.component.ts,
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   app.component.html,
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   highlight.directive.ts,
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   main.ts,
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   index.html
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  `)
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a#why-input
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.l-main-section
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:marked
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  ### Appendix: Input properties
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  Earlier we declared the `highlightColor` property to be an ***input*** property of our
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  `HighlightDirective`
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  We've seen properties in bindings before. 
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  We never had to declare them as anything. Why now?
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  Angular makes a subtle but important distinction between binding **sources** and **targets**.
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  In all previous bindings, the directive or component property was a binding ***source***.
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  A property is a *source* if it appears in the template expression to the ***right*** of the equals (=).
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  A property is a *target* when it appears in **square brackets** ([ ]) to the **left** of the equals (=) ...
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  as it is does when we bind to the `myHighlight` property of the `HighlightDirective`, 
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+makeExample('attribute-directives/ts/app/app.component.html','pHost')(format=".")
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:marked
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  The 'color' in `[myHighlight]="color"` is a binding ***source***.
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  A source property doesn't require a declaration.
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  The 'myHighlight' in `[myHighlight]="color"` *is* a binding ***target***.
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  We must declare it as an *input* property.
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  Angular rejects the binding with a clear error if we don't.
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  Angular treats a *target* property differently for a good reason.
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  A component or directive in target position needs protection.
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  Imagine that our `HighlightDirective` did truly wonderous things.
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  We graciously made a gift of it to the world. 
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  To our surprise, some people — perhaps naively —
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  started binding to *every* property of our directive. 
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  Not just the one or two properties we expected them to target. *Every* property.
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  That could really mess up our directive in ways we didn't anticipate and have no desire to support.
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  The *input* declaration ensures that consumers of our directive can only bind to
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  the properties of our public API ... nothing else.
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