169 lines
5.6 KiB
Plaintext
169 lines
5.6 KiB
Plaintext
.l-main-section
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p.
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As long as you already
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<a href="https://www.dartlang.org/downloads/">have the Dart SDK</a>,
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getting started with Angular 2 is simple:
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ol
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li Depend on the <b>angular2</b> pub package.
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li Create a Dart file that defines (directly or indirectly) a
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<b>root component</b> and <b>bootstraps</b> Angular.
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li Create an HTML file that uses the root component and points to the Dart file
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p.
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You can use whichever editor or IDE you like,
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or just use the command-line tools that the Dart SDK provides.
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See <a href="http://www.dartlang.org/tools/">Dart Tools</a>
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for more information.
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h2#section-install Depend on angular2
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p.
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To use Angular2 in your app, include angular2 as a dependency in
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your app's <b>pubspec.yaml</b> file. For example:
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code-example(language="yaml").
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# pubspec.yaml
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name: getting_started
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description: Getting Started example
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version: 0.0.1
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dependencies:
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angular2: 2.0.0-alpha.39
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browser: ^0.10.0
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transformers:
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- angular2:
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entry_points: web/main.dart
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p.
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Run <b>pub get</b> to download the packages your app depends on.
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(<a href="https://www.dartlang.org/tools/">Dart-savvy editors and IDEs</a>
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typically run <code>pub get</code> for you.)
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.l-main-section
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h2#section-set-up-the-starting-component Write the Dart code
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p.
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Next to your <code>pubspec.yaml</code> file,
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create a <code>web</code> subdirectory containing a Dart file
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(<code>main.dart</code>).
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Edit <code>main.dart</code>, adding a component class (<b>AppComponent</b>),
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configuring it to bind to the <code><my-app></code> element,
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and creating a top-level <code>main()</code> function that calls
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Angular's <code>bootstrap()</code> function.
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code-example(language="dart" escape="html").
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// web/main.dart
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import 'package:angular2/angular2.dart';
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import 'package:angular2/bootstrap.dart';
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@Component(selector: 'my-app')
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@View(template: '<h1>My first Angular 2 App</h1>')
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class AppComponent {}
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main() {
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bootstrap(AppComponent);
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}
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.l-main-section
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h2#section-create-an-entry-point Create an HTML file
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p.
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In the <code>web/</code> directory of your app,
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create an HTML file (<code>index.html</code>).
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Edit <code>index.html</code> to add a <code><my-app></code> element
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and call <code>main.dart</code>.
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code-example(language="html").
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<!-- web/index.html -->
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<!DOCTYPE html>
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<html>
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<head>
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<title>Getting Started</title>
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<link rel="stylesheet" href="style.css">
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<script async src="main.dart" type="application/dart"></script>
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<script async src="packages/browser/dart.js"></script>
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</head>
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<body>
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<my-app></my-app>
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</body>
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</html>
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.l-main-section
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h2#section-run-it Run the app!
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p.
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Now run the app. How you do this depends on your tools.
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ul
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li.
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If you're using <b>WebStorm</b> or <b>IntelliJ IDEA</b>,
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right-click <b>web/index.html</b>,
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and choose <b>Run 'index.html'</b>.
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li.
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If you're using the command line and don't have Dartium,
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serve the app using <code>pub serve</code>,
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and then run it by visiting <b>http://localhost:8080</b> in a browser.
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Generating the JavaScript takes a few seconds when you first visit the page,
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and the generated JavaScript is currently large.
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The generated JavaScript will be smaller once
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Angular's transformer becomes available.
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p.
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You should see something like this:
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figure.image-display
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img(src='/resources/images/examples/setup-example1.png' alt="Example of Todo App")
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.l-main-section
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h2#section-explanations Explanations
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p This basic Angular app contains the structure for any app you'll build.
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.l-sub-section
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h3 It's all a tree
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p.
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You can think of an Angular app as a tree of components.
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The root component acts as the top-level container for the rest of your application.
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You've named this one <code>AppComponent</code>, but there's
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nothing special about the name; you can use whatever makes sense to you.
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p.
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The root component's job is to give a location in the HTML file where
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your application can
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render through its element—in this case, <code><my-app></code>.
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There's nothing special about the HTML filename or the element name;
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you can pick whatever you like.
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p.
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The root component loads the initial template for the application,
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which loads other components to perform
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whatever functions your application needs—menu bars, views, forms, and so on.
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We'll walk through examples of all of
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these in the following pages.
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.l-sub-section
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h3 @Component and @View annotations
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p.
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A component annotation describes details about the component.
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An annotation can be identified by its at-sign (<code>@</code>).
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p.
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The <code>@Component</code> annotation defines the HTML tag for
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the component by specifying the component's CSS selector.
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p.
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The <code>@View</code> annotation defines the HTML that
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represents the component.
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The component you wrote uses an inline template,
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but you can also have an external template.
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To use an external template,
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specify a <code>templateUrl</code> property and
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give it the path to the HTML file.
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p.
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Exciting! Not excited yet?
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Let's move on to <a href="displaying-data.html">Displaying Data</a>.
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