576 lines
		
	
	
		
			22 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
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			576 lines
		
	
	
		
			22 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Plaintext
		
	
	
	
	
	
block includes
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  include ../_util-fns
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- var top="vertical-align:top"
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:marked
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  # Component Lifecycle
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  A Component has a lifecycle managed by Angular itself. Angular creates it, renders it, creates and renders its children,
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  checks it when its data-bound properties change, and destroys it before removing it from the DOM.
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  Angular offers **component lifecycle hooks**
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  that give us visibility into these key moments and the ability to act when they occur.
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  We cover these hooks in this chapter and demonstrate how they work in code.
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  * [The lifecycle hooks](#hooks-overview)
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  * [The hook-call sequence](#hook-sequence)
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  * [Other Angular lifecycle hooks](#other-lifecycles)
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  * [The lifecycle sample](#the-sample)
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    * [All](#peek-a-boo)
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    * [Spying OnInit and OnDestroy](#spy)
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    * [OnChanges](#onchanges)
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    * [DoCheck](#docheck)
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    * [AfterViewInit and AfterViewChecked](#afterview)
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    * [AfterContentInit and AfterContentChecked](#aftercontent)
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  Try the <live-example></live-example>.
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a#hooks-overview
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.l-main-section
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:marked
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  ## Component lifecycle Hooks
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  Directive and component instances have a lifecycle
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  as Angular creates, updates, and destroys them.
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  Developers can tap into key moments in that lifecycle by implementing
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  one or more of the *Lifecycle Hook* interfaces in the Angular `core` library.
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  Each interface has a single hook method whose name is the interface name prefixed with `ng`.
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  For example, the `OnInit` interface has a hook method named `ngOnInit`.
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  We might implement it in a component class like this:
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+makeExample('lifecycle-hooks/ts/app/peek-a-boo.component.ts', 'ngOnInit', 'peek-a-boo.component.ts (excerpt)')(format='.')
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:marked
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  No directive or component will implement all of them and some of the hooks only make sense for components.
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  Angular only calls a directive/component hook method *if it is defined*.
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+ifDocsFor('ts|js')
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  .l-sub-section
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    :marked
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      ### Interface optional?
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      The interfaces are optional for JavaScript and Typescript developers from a purely technical perspective.
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      The JavaScript language doesn't have interfaces.
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      Angular can't see TypeScript interfaces at runtime because they disappear from the transpiled JavaScript.
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      Fortunately, they aren't necessary.
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      We don't have to add the lifecycle hook interfaces to our directives and components to benefit from the hooks themselves.
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      Angular instead inspects our directive and component classes and calls the hook methods *if they are defined*.
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      Angular will find and call methods like `ngOnInit()`, with or without the interfaces.
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      Nonetheless, we strongly recommend adding interfaces to TypeScript directive classes
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      in order to benefit from strong typing and editor tooling.
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:marked
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  Here are the component lifecycle hook methods:
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  ### Directives and Components
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table(width="100%")
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  col(width="20%")
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  col(width="80%")
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  tr
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    th Hook
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    th Purpose
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  tr(style=top)
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    td ngOnInit
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    td
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      :marked
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        Initialize the directive/component after Angular initializes the data-bound input properties.
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  tr(style=top)
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    td ngOnChanges
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    td
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      :marked
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        Respond after Angular sets a data-bound input property.
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        The method receives a `changes` object of current and previous values.
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  tr(style=top)
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    td ngDoCheck
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    td
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      :marked
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        Detect and act upon changes that Angular can't or won't
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        detect on its own. Called every change detection run.
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  tr(style=top)
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    td ngOnDestroy
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    td
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      :marked
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        Cleanup just before Angular destroys the directive/component.
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        Unsubscribe observables and detach event handlers to avoid memory leaks.
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:marked
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  ### Components only
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table(width="100%")
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  col(width="20%")
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  col(width="80%")
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  tr
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    th Hook
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    th Purpose
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  tr(style=top)
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    td ngAfterContentInit
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    td
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      :marked
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        After Angular projects external content into its view.
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  tr(style=top)
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    td ngAfterContentChecked
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    td
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      :marked
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        After Angular checks the bindings of the external content that it projected into its view.
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  tr(style=top)
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    td ngAfterViewInit
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    td
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      :marked
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        After Angular creates the component's view(s).
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  tr(style=top)
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    td ngAfterViewChecked
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    td
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      :marked
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        After Angular checks the bindings of the component's view(s).
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:marked
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  Angular does not call the hook methods in this order.
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a(id="hook-sequence")
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.l-main-section
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:marked
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  ## Lifecycle sequence
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  *After* Angular creates a component/directive by `new`-ing its constructor,
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  it calls the lifecycle hook methods in the following sequence at specific moments:
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table(width="100%")
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  col(width="20%")
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  col(width="80%")
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  tr
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    th Hook
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    th Timing
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  tr(style=top)
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    td ngOnChanges
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    td
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      :marked
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        before `ngOnInit` and when a data-bound input property value changes.
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  tr(style=top)
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    td ngOnInit
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    td
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      :marked
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        after the first `ngOnChanges`.
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  tr(style=top)
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    td ngDoCheck
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    td
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      :marked
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        during every Angular change detection cycle.
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  tr(style=top)
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    td ngAfterContentInit
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    td
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      :marked
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        after projecting content into the component.
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  tr(style=top)
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    td ngAfterContentChecked
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    td
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      :marked
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         after every check of projected component content.
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  tr(style=top)
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    td ngAfterViewInit
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    td
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      :marked
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        after initializing the component's views and child views.
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  tr(style=top)
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    td ngAfterViewChecked
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    td
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      :marked
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         after every check of the component's views and child views.
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  tr(style=top)
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    td ngOnDestroy
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    td
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      :marked
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         just before Angular destroys the directive/component.
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a(id="other-lifecycles")
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.l-main-section
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:marked
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  ## Other lifecycle hooks
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  Other Angular sub-systems may have their own lifecycle hooks apart from the component hooks we've listed.
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block other-angular-subsystems
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  //- N/A for TS.
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:marked
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  3rd party libraries might implement their hooks as well in order to give us, the developers, more
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  control over how these libraries are used.
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.l-main-section#the-sample
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:marked
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  ## Lifecycle exercises
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  The <live-example></live-example>
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  demonstrates the lifecycle hooks in action through a series of exercises
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  presented as components under the control of the root `AppComponent`.
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  They follow a common pattern:  a *parent* component serves as a test rig for
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  a *child* component that illustrates one or more of the lifecycle hook methods.
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  Here's a brief description of each exercise:
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table(width="100%")
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  col(width="20%")
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  col(width="80%")
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  tr
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    th Component
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    th Description
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  tr(style=top)
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    td <a href="#peek-a-boo">Peek-a-boo</a>
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    td
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      :marked
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        Demonstrates every lifecycle hook.
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        Each hook method writes to the on-screen log.
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  tr(style=top)
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    td <a href="#spy">Spy</a>
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    td
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      :marked
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        Directives have lifecycle hooks too.
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        We create a `SpyDirective` that logs when the element it spies upon is
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        created or destroyed using the `ngOnInit` and `ngOnDestroy` hooks.
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        We apply the `SpyDirective` to a `<div>` in an `ngFor` *hero* repeater
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        managed by the parent `SpyComponent`.
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  tr(style=top)
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    td <a href="#onchanges">OnChanges</a>
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    td
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      :marked
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        See how Angular calls the `ngOnChanges` hook with a `changes` object
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        every time one of the component input properties changes.
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        Shows how to interpret the `changes` object.
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  tr(style=top)
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    td <a href="#docheck">DoCheck</a>
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    td
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      :marked
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        Implements an `ngDoCheck` method with custom change detection.
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        See how often Angular calls this hook and watch it post changes to a log.
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  tr(style=top)
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    td <a href="#afterview">AfterView</a>
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    td
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      :marked
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        Shows what Angular means by a *view*.
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        Demonstrates the `ngAfterViewInit` and `ngAfterViewChecked` hooks.
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  tr(style=top)
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    td <a href="#aftercontent">AfterContent</a>
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    td
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      :marked
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        Shows how to project external content into a component and
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        how to distinguish projected content from a component's view children.
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        Demonstrates the `ngAfterContentInit` and `ngAfterContentChecked` hooks.
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  tr(style=top)
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    td Counter
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    td
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      :marked
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        Demonstrates a combination of a component and a directive
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        each with its own hooks.
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        In this example, a `CounterComponent` logs a change (via `ngOnChanges`)
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        every time the parent component increments its input counter property.
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        Meanwhile, we apply the `SpyDirective` from the previous example
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        to the `CounterComponent` log and watch log entries be created and destroyed.
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:marked
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  We discuss the exercises in further detail over this chapter as we learn more about the lifecycle hooks.
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a(id="peek-a-boo")
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.l-main-section
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:marked
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  ## Peek-a-boo: all hooks
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  The `PeekABooComponent` demonstrates all of the hooks in one component.
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  In real life, we'd rarely if ever implement all of the interfaces like this.
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  We do so in peek-a-boo in order to watch Angular call the hooks in the expected order.
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  In this snapshot, we clicked the *Create...* button and then the *Destroy...* button.
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figure.image-display
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  img(src="/resources/images/devguide/lifecycle-hooks/peek-a-boo.png" alt="Peek-a-boo")
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:marked
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  The sequence of log messages follows the prescribed hook calling order:
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  `OnChanges`, `OnInit`, `DoCheck` (3x), `AfterContentInit`, `AfterContentChecked` (3x),
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  `AfterViewInit`, `AfterViewChecked` (3x), and `OnDestroy`.
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.l-sub-section
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  :marked
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    The constructor isn't an Angular hook *per se*.
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    We log in it to confirm that input properties (the `name` property in this case) have no assigned values at construction.
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:marked
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  Had we clicked the *Update Hero* button, we'd have seen another `OnChanges` and two more triplets of
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  `DoCheck`, `AfterContentChecked` and `AfterViewChecked`.
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  Clearly these three hooks fire a *lot* and we must keep the logic we put in these hooks
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  as lean as possible!
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  Our next examples focus on hook details.
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.a(id="spy")
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.l-main-section
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:marked
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  ## Spying *OnInit* and *OnDestroy*
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  We're going undercover for these two hooks. We want to know when an element is initialized or destroyed,
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  but we don't want *it* to know we're watching.
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  This is the perfect infiltration job for a directive.
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  Our heroes will never know it's there.
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.l-sub-section
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  :marked
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    Kidding aside, we're emphasizing two key points:
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    1. Angular calls hook methods for *directives* as well as components.
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    2. A spy directive can gives us insight into a DOM object that we cannot change directly.
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    Obviously we can't change the implementation of a native `div`.
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    We can't modify a third party component either.
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    But we can watch both with a directive.
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:marked
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  Our sneaky spy directive is simple,  consisting almost entirely of `ngOnInit` and `ngOnDestroy` hooks
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  that log messages to the parent via an injected `LoggerService`.
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+makeExample('lifecycle-hooks/ts/app/spy.directive.ts', 'spy-directive')(format=".")
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:marked
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  We can apply the spy to any native or component element and it'll be initialized and destroyed
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  at the same time as that element.
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  Here we attach it to the repeated hero `<div>`
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+makeExample('lifecycle-hooks/ts/app/spy.component.html', 'template')(format=".")
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:marked
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  Each spy's birth and death marks the birth and death of the attached hero `<div>`
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  with an entry in the *Hook Log* as we see here:
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figure.image-display
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  img(src='/resources/images/devguide/lifecycle-hooks/spy-directive.gif' alt="Spy Directive")
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:marked
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  Adding a hero results in a new hero `<div>`. The spy's `ngOnInit` logs that event.
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  We see a new entry for each hero.
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  The *Reset* button clears the `heroes` list.
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  Angular removes all hero divs from the DOM and destroys their spy directives at the same time.
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  The spy's `ngOnDestroy` method reports its last moments.
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  The `ngOnInit` and `ngOnDestroy` methods have more vital roles to play in real applications.
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  Let's see why we need them.
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  ### OnInit
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  We turn to `ngOnInit` for two main reasons:
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  1. To perform complex initializations shortly after construction
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  1. To set up the component after Angular sets the input properties
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  An `ngOnInit` often fetches data for the component as shown in the
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  [Tutorial](../tutorial/toh-pt4.html#oninit) and [HTTP](server-communication.html#oninit) chapters.
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  We don't fetch data in a component constructor. Why?
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  Because experienced developers agree that components should be cheap and safe to construct.
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  We shouldn't worry that a new component will try to contact a remote server when
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  created under test or before we decide to display it.
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  Constructors should do no more than set the initial local variables to simple values.
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  When a component must start working _soon_ after creation,
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  we can count on Angular to call the `ngOnInit` method to jumpstart it.
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  That's where the heavy initialization logic belongs.
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  Remember also that a directive's data-bound input properties are not set until _after construction_.
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  That's a problem if we need to initialize the directive based on those properties.
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  They'll have been set when our `ngOninit` runs.
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.l-sub-section
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  :marked
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    Our first opportunity to access those properties is the `ngOnChanges` method which
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    Angular calls before `ngOnInit`. But Angular calls `ngOnChanges` many times after that.
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    It only calls `ngOnInit` once.
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:marked
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  ### OnDestroy
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  Put cleanup logic in `ngOnDestroy`, the logic that *must* run before Angular destroys the directive.
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  This is the time to notify another part of the application that this component is going away.
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  This is the place to free resources that won't be garbage collected automatically.
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  Unsubscribe from observables and DOM events. Stop interval timers.
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  Unregister all callbacks that this directive registered with global or application services.
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  We risk memory leaks if we neglect to do so.
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.l-main-section
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:marked
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  ## OnChanges
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  We monitor the `OnChanges` hook in this example.
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  Angular calls its `ngOnChanges` method whenever it detects changes to ***input properties*** of the component (or directive).
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  Here is our implementation of the hook.
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+makeExample('lifecycle-hooks/ts/app/on-changes.component.ts', 'ng-on-changes', 'OnChangesComponent (ngOnChanges)')(format=".")
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:marked
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  The `ngOnChanges` method takes an object that maps each changed property name to a
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  [SimpleChange](../api/core/index/SimpleChange-class.html) object with the current and previous property values.
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  We iterate over the changed properties and log them.
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  The input properties for our example `OnChangesComponent` are `hero` and `power`.
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+makeExample('lifecycle-hooks/ts/app/on-changes.component.ts', 'inputs')(format=".")
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:marked
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  The parent binds to them like this:
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+makeExample('lifecycle-hooks/ts/app/on-changes-parent.component.html', 'on-changes')
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:marked
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  Here's the sample in action as we make changes.
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figure.image-display
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  img(src='/resources/images/devguide/lifecycle-hooks/on-changes-anim.gif' alt="OnChanges")
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:marked
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  We see log entries as the string value of the *power* property changes. But the `ngOnChanges` did not catch changes to `hero.name`
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  That's surprising at first.
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						|
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  Angular only calls the hook when the value of the input property changes.
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  The value of the `hero` property is the *reference to the hero object*.
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  Angular doesn't care that the hero's own `name` property changed.
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  The hero object *reference* didn't change so, from Angular's perspective, there is no change to report!
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.l-main-section
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:marked
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  ## DoCheck
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						|
  We can use the `DoCheck` hook to detect and act upon changes that Angular doesn't catch on its own.
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.l-sub-section
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  :marked
 | 
						|
    With this method we can detect a change that Angular overlooked.
 | 
						|
    What we do with that information to refresh the display is a separate matter.
 | 
						|
:marked
 | 
						|
  The *DoCheck* sample extends the *OnChanges* sample with this implementation of `DoCheck`:
 | 
						|
+makeExample('lifecycle-hooks/ts/app/do-check.component.ts', 'ng-do-check', 'DoCheckComponent (ngDoCheck)')(format=".")
 | 
						|
:marked
 | 
						|
  We manually check everything that we care about, capturing and comparing against previous values.
 | 
						|
  We write a special message to the log when there are no substantive changes
 | 
						|
  to the hero or the power so we can keep an eye on the method's performance characteristics.
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
  The results are illuminating:
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
figure.image-display
 | 
						|
  img(src='/resources/images/devguide/lifecycle-hooks/do-check-anim.gif' alt="DoCheck")
 | 
						|
:marked
 | 
						|
  We now are able to detect when the hero's `name` has changed. But we must be careful.
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
  The `ngDoCheck` hook is called with enormous frequency —
 | 
						|
  after _every_ change detection cycle no matter where the change occurred.
 | 
						|
  It's called over twenty times in this example before the user can do anything.
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
  Most of these initial checks are triggered by Angular's first rendering of *unrelated data elsewhere on the page*.
 | 
						|
  Mere mousing into another input box triggers a call.
 | 
						|
  Relatively few calls reveal actual changes to pertinent data.
 | 
						|
  Clearly our implementation must be very lightweight or the user experience may suffer.
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
.l-sub-section
 | 
						|
  :marked
 | 
						|
    We also see that the `ngOnChanges` method is called in contradiction of the
 | 
						|
    [incorrect API documentation](../api/core/index/DoCheck-class.html).
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
.l-main-section
 | 
						|
:marked
 | 
						|
  ## AfterView
 | 
						|
  The *AfterView* sample explores the `AfterViewInit` and `AfterViewChecked` hooks that Angular calls
 | 
						|
  *after* it creates a component's child views.
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
  Here's a child view that displays a hero's name in an input box:
 | 
						|
+makeExample('lifecycle-hooks/ts/app/after-view.component.ts', 'child-view', 'ChildComponent')(format=".")
 | 
						|
:marked
 | 
						|
  The `AfterViewComponent` displays this child view *within its template*:
 | 
						|
+makeExample('lifecycle-hooks/ts/app/after-view.component.ts', 'template', 'AfterViewComponent (template)')(format=".")
 | 
						|
:marked
 | 
						|
  The following hooks take action based on changing values *within the child view*
 | 
						|
  which we can only reach by querying for the child view via the property decorated with
 | 
						|
  [@ViewChild](../api/core/index/ViewChild-var.html).
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
+makeExample('lifecycle-hooks/ts/app/after-view.component.ts', 'hooks', 'AfterViewComponent (class excerpts)')(format=".")
 | 
						|
.a(id="wait-a-tick")
 | 
						|
:marked
 | 
						|
  ### Abide by the unidirectional data flow rule
 | 
						|
  The `doSomething` method updates the screen when the hero name exceeds 10 characters.
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
+makeExample('lifecycle-hooks/ts/app/after-view.component.ts', 'do-something', 'AfterViewComponent (doSomething)')(format=".")
 | 
						|
:marked
 | 
						|
  Why does the `doSomething` method wait a tick before updating `comment`?
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
  Because we must adhere to Angular's unidirectional data flow rule which says that
 | 
						|
  we may not update the view *after* it has been composed.
 | 
						|
  Both hooks fire after the component's view has been composed.
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
  Angular throws an error if we update component's data-bound `comment` property immediately (try it!).
 | 
						|
block tick-methods
 | 
						|
  :marked
 | 
						|
    The `LoggerService.tick` methods, which are implemented by a call to `setTimeout`, postpone the update one turn of the of the browser's JavaScript cycle ... and that's long enough.
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
:marked
 | 
						|
  Here's *AfterView* in action
 | 
						|
figure.image-display
 | 
						|
  img(src='/resources/images/devguide/lifecycle-hooks/after-view-anim.gif' alt="AfterView")
 | 
						|
:marked
 | 
						|
  Notice that Angular frequently calls `AfterViewChecked`, often when there are no changes of interest.
 | 
						|
  Write lean hook methods to avoid performance problems.
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
.l-main-section
 | 
						|
:marked
 | 
						|
  ## AfterContent
 | 
						|
  The *AfterContent* sample explores the `AfterContentInit` and `AfterContentChecked` hooks that Angular calls
 | 
						|
  *after* Angular projects external content into the component.
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
  ### Content projection
 | 
						|
  *Content projection* is a way to import HTML content from outside the component and insert that content
 | 
						|
  into the component's template in a designated spot.
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
.l-sub-section
 | 
						|
  :marked
 | 
						|
    Angular 1 developers know this technique as *transclusion*.
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
:marked
 | 
						|
  We'll illustrate with a variation on the [previous](#afterview) example
 | 
						|
  whose behavior and output is almost the same.
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
  This time, instead of including the child view within the template, we'll import it from
 | 
						|
  the `AfterContentComponent`'s parent. Here's the parent's template.
 | 
						|
+makeExample('lifecycle-hooks/ts/app/after-content.component.ts', 'parent-template', 'AfterContentParentComponent (template excerpt)')(format=".")
 | 
						|
:marked
 | 
						|
  Notice that the `<my-child>` tag is tucked between the `<after-content>` tags.
 | 
						|
  We never put content between a component's element tags *unless we intend to project that content
 | 
						|
  into the component*.
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
  Now look at the component's template:
 | 
						|
+makeExample('lifecycle-hooks/ts/app/after-content.component.ts', 'template', 'AfterContentComponent (template)')(format=".")
 | 
						|
:marked
 | 
						|
  The `<ng-content>` tag is a *placeholder* for the external content.
 | 
						|
  They tell Angular where to insert that content.
 | 
						|
  In this case, the projected content is the `<my-child>` from the parent.
 | 
						|
figure.image-display
 | 
						|
  img(src='/resources/images/devguide/lifecycle-hooks/projected-child-view.png' width="230" alt="Projected Content")
 | 
						|
:marked
 | 
						|
.l-sub-section
 | 
						|
  :marked
 | 
						|
    The tell-tale signs of *content projection* are (a) HTML between component element tags
 | 
						|
    and (b) the presence of `<ng-content>` tags in the component's template.
 | 
						|
:marked
 | 
						|
  ### AfterContent hooks
 | 
						|
  *AfterContent* hooks are similar to the *AfterView* hooks. The key difference is the kind of child component
 | 
						|
  that we're looking for.
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
  * The *AfterView* hooks concern `ViewChildren`, the child components whose element tags
 | 
						|
  appear *within* the component's template.
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
  * The *AfterContent* hooks concern `ContentChildren`, the child components that Angular
 | 
						|
  projected into the component.
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
  The following *AfterContent* hooks take action based on changing values in a  *content child*
 | 
						|
  which we can only reach by querying for it via the property decorated with
 | 
						|
  [@ContentChild](../api/core/index/ContentChild-var.html).
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
+makeExample('lifecycle-hooks/ts/app/after-content.component.ts', 'hooks', 'AfterContentComponent (class excerpts)')(format=".")
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
:marked
 | 
						|
   ### No unidirectional flow worries
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
   This component's `doSomething` method update's the component's data-bound `comment` property immediately.
 | 
						|
   There's no [need to wait](#wait-a-tick).
 | 
						|
 | 
						|
   Recall that Angular calls both *AfterContent* hooks before calling either of the *AfterView* hooks.
 | 
						|
   Angular completes composition of the projected content *before* finishing the composition of this component's view.
 | 
						|
   We still have a window of opportunity to modify that view.
 |