488 lines
		
	
	
		
			22 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
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			488 lines
		
	
	
		
			22 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Plaintext
		
	
	
	
	
	
| block includes
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|   include ../_util-fns
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| 
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| :marked
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|   Every application starts out with what seems like a simple task: get data, transform them, and show them to users.
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|   Getting data could be as simple as creating a local variable or as complex as streaming data over a Websocket.
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| 
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|   Once data arrive, we could push their raw `toString` values directly to the view.
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|   That rarely makes for a good user experience.
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|   E.g., almost everyone prefers a simple birthday date like
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|   <samp>April 15, 1988</samp> to the original raw string format
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|   — <samp>Fri Apr 15 1988 00:00:00 GMT-0700 (Pacific Daylight Time)</samp>.
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| 
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|   Clearly some values benefit from a bit of massage. We soon discover that we
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|   desire many of the same transformations repeatedly, both within and across many applications.
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|   We almost think of them as styles.
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|   In fact, we'd like to apply them in our HTML templates as we do styles.
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| 
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|   Introducing Angular pipes, a way to write display-value transformations that we can declare in our HTML!
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|   Try the <live-example></live-example>.
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| 
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| .l-main-section
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| :marked
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|   ## Using Pipes
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| 
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|   A pipe takes in data as input and transforms it to a desired output.
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|   We'll illustrate by transforming a component's birthday property into
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|   a human-friendly date.
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| 
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| +makeExample('pipes/ts/app/hero-birthday1.component.ts', null, 'app/hero-birthday1.component.ts')(format='.')
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| 
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| :marked
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|   Focus on the component's template.
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| 
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| +makeExample('pipes/ts/app/app.component.html', 'hero-birthday-template')(format=".")
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| 
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| :marked
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|   Inside the interpolation expression we flow the component's `birthday` value through the
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|   [pipe operator](./template-syntax.html#pipe) ( | ) to the [Date pipe](../api/common/index/DatePipe-class.html)
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|   function on the right. All pipes work this way.
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| 
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| .l-sub-section
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|   :marked
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|     The `Date` and `Currency` pipes need the **ECMAScript Internationalization API**.
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|     Safari and other older browsers don't support it. We can add support with a polyfill.
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| 
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|   code-example(language="html").
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|     <script src="https://cdn.polyfill.io/v2/polyfill.min.js?features=Intl.~locale.en"></script>
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| 
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| .l-main-section
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| :marked
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|   ## Built-in pipes
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|   Angular comes with a stock of pipes such as
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|   `DatePipe`, `UpperCasePipe`, `LowerCasePipe`, `CurrencyPipe`, and `PercentPipe`.
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|   They are all immediately available for use in any template.
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| 
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| .l-sub-section
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|   :marked
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|     Learn more about these and many other built-in pipes in the [API Reference](../api/#!?apiFilter=pipe);
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|     filter for entries that include the word "pipe".
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| 
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|     Angular doesn't have a `FilterPipe` or an `OrderByPipe` for reasons explained in an [appendix below](#no-filter-pipe).
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| 
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| .l-main-section
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| :marked
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|   ## Parameterizing a Pipe
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| 
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|   A pipe may accept any number of optional parameters to fine-tune its output.
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|   We add parameters to a pipe by following the pipe name with a colon ( : ) and then the parameter value
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|   (e.g., `currency:'EUR'`). If our pipe accepts multiple parameters, we separate the values with colons (e.g. `slice:1:5`)
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| 
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|   We'll modify our birthday template to give the date pipe a format parameter.
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|   After formatting the hero's April 15th birthday, it should render as **<samp>04/15/88</samp>**:
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| 
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| +makeExample('pipes/ts/app/app.component.html', 'format-birthday')(format=".")
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| 
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| :marked
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|   The parameter value can be any valid
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|   [template expression](./template-syntax.html#template-expressions)
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|   such as a string literal or a component property.
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|   In other words, we can control the format through a binding the same way we control the birthday value through a binding.
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| 
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|   Let's write a second component that *binds* the pipe's format parameter
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|   to the component's `format` property. Here's the template for that component:
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| 
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| +makeExample('pipes/ts/app/hero-birthday2.component.ts', 'template', 'app/hero-birthday2.component.ts (template)')(format=".")
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| 
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| :marked
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|   We also added a button to the template and bound its click event to the component's `toggleFormat()` method.
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|   That method toggles the component's `format` property between a short form
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|   (`'shortDate'`) and a longer form (`'fullDate'`).
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| 
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| +makeExample('pipes/ts/app/hero-birthday2.component.ts', 'class', 'app/hero-birthday2.component.ts (class)')(format='.')
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| 
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| :marked
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|   As we click the button, the displayed date alternates between
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|   "**<samp>04/15/1988</samp>**" and
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|   "**<samp>Friday, April 15, 1988</samp>**".
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| 
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| figure.image-display
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|     img(src='/resources/images/devguide/pipes/date-format-toggle-anim.gif' alt="Date Format Toggle")
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| :marked
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| 
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| .l-sub-section
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|   :marked
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|     Learn more about the `DatePipes` format options in the [API Docs](../api/common/index/DatePipe-class.html).
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| 
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| :marked
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|   ## Chaining pipes
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| 
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|   We can chain pipes together in potentially useful combinations.
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|   In the following example, we chain the birthday to the `DatePipe` and on to the `UpperCasePipe`
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|   so we can display the birthday in uppercase. The following birthday displays as
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|   **<samp>APR 15, 1988</samp>**.
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| 
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| +makeExample('pipes/ts/app/app.component.html', 'chained-birthday')(format=".")
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| 
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| :marked
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|   This example — which displays **<samp>FRIDAY, APRIL 15, 1988</samp>** —
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|   chains the same pipes as above, but passes in a parameter to `date` as well.
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| 
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| +makeExample('pipes/ts/app/app.component.html', 'chained-parameter-birthday')(format=".")
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| 
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| .l-main-section
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| :marked
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|   ## Custom Pipes
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| 
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|   We can write our own custom pipes.
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|   Here's a custom pipe named `ExponentialStrengthPipe` that can boost a hero's powers:
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| 
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| +makeExample('pipes/ts/app/exponential-strength.pipe.ts', null, 'app/exponential-strength.pipe.ts')(format=".")
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| 
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| :marked
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|   This pipe definition reveals several key points:
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| 
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|   * A pipe is a class decorated with pipe metadata.
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| 
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|   * The pipe class implements the `PipeTransform` interface's `transform` method that
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|   accepts an input value followed by optional parameters and returns the transformed value.
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| 
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|   * There will be one additional argument to the `transform` method for each parameter passed to the pipe.
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|   Our pipe has one such parameter: the `exponent`.
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| 
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|   * We tell Angular that this is a pipe by applying the
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|   `@Pipe` #{_decorator} which we import from the core Angular library.
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| 
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|   * The `@Pipe` #{_decorator} allows us to define the
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|      pipe name that we'll use within template expressions. It must be a valid JavaScript identifier.
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|      Our pipe's name is `exponentialStrength`.
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| 
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| .l-sub-section
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|   :marked
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|     ### The *PipeTransform* Interface
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| 
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|     The `transform` method is essential to a pipe.
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|     The `PipeTransform` *interface* defines that method and guides both tooling and the compiler.
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|     It is technically optional; Angular looks for and executes the `transform` method regardless.
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| 
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| :marked
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|   Now we need a component to demonstrate our pipe.
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| +makeExample('pipes/ts/app/power-booster.component.ts',null,'app/power-booster.component.ts')(format='.')
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| figure.image-display
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|     img(src='/resources/images/devguide/pipes/power-booster.png' alt="Power Booster")
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| 
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| :marked
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|   Two things to note:
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|   1. We use our custom pipe the same way we use the built-in pipes.
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| 
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|   1. We must include our pipe in the `declarations` #{_array} of the AppModule.
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| 
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| .callout.is-helpful
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|   header Remember the declarations #{_array}!
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|   :marked
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|     Angular reports an error if we neglect to list our custom pipe.
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|     We didn't list the `DatePipe` in our previous example because all
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|     Angular built-in pipes are pre-registered.
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|     Custom pipes must be registered manually.
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| 
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| :marked
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|   If we try the <live-example></live-example>,
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|   we can probe its behavior by changing the value and the optional exponent in the template.
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| 
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|   ## Power Boost Calculator (extra-credit)
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| 
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|   It's not much fun updating the template to test our custom pipe.
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|   We could upgrade the example to a "Power Boost Calculator" that combines
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|   our pipe and two-way data binding with `ngModel`.
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| 
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| +makeExample('pipes/ts/app/power-boost-calculator.component.ts', null, '/app/power-boost-calculator.component.ts')(format='.')
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| 
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| figure.image-display
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|     img(src='/resources/images/devguide/pipes/power-boost-calculator-anim.gif' alt="Power Boost Calculator")
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| 
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| .l-main-section
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| a#change-detection
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| :marked
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|   ## Pipes and Change Detection
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| 
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|   Angular looks for changes to data-bound values through a *change detection* process that runs after every JavaScript event:
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|   every keystroke, mouse move, timer tick, and server response. This could be expensive.
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|   Angular strives to lower the cost whenever possible and appropriate.
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| 
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|   Angular picks a simpler, faster change detection algorithm when we use a pipe. Let's see how.
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| 
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|   ### No pipe
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| 
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|   The component in our next example uses the default, aggressive change detection strategy to monitor and update
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|   its display of every hero in the `heroes` #{_array}. Here's the template:
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| 
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| +makeExample('pipes/ts/app/flying-heroes.component.html', 'template-1', 'app/flying-heroes.component.html (v1)')(format='.')
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| 
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| :marked
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|   The companion component class provides heroes, adds new heroes into the #{_array}, and can reset the #{_array}.
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| +makeExample('pipes/ts/app/flying-heroes.component.ts', 'v1', 'app/flying-heroes.component.ts (v1)')(format='.')
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| 
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| :marked
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|   We can add a new hero and Angular updates the display when we do.
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|   The `reset` button replaces `heroes` with a new #{_array} of the original heroes and Angular updates the display when we do.
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|   If we added the ability to remove or change a hero, Angular would detect those changes too and update the display as well.
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| 
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|   ### Flying Heroes pipe
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| 
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|   Let's add a `FlyingHeroesPipe` to the `*ngFor` repeater that filters the list of heroes to just those heroes who can fly.
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| +makeExample('pipes/ts/app/flying-heroes.component.html', 'template-flying-heroes', 'app/flying-heroes.component.html (flyers)')(format='.')
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| :marked
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|   Here's the `FlyingHeroesPipe` implementation which follows the pattern for custom pipes we saw earlier.
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| +makeExample('pipes/ts/app/flying-heroes.pipe.ts', 'pure', 'app/flying-heroes.pipe.ts')(format='.')
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| 
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| :marked
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|   When we run the sample now we see odd behavior (try it in the <live-example></live-example>).
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|   Every hero we add is a flying hero but none of them are displayed.
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| 
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|   Although we're not getting the behavior we want, Angular isn't broken.
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|   It's just using a different change detection algorithm — one that ignores changes to the list or any of its items.
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| 
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|   Look at how we're adding a new hero:
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| +makeExample('pipes/ts/app/flying-heroes.component.ts', 'push')(format='.')
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| :marked
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|   We're adding the new hero into the `heroes` #{_array}.  The reference to the #{_array} hasn't changed.
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|   It's the same #{_array}. That's all Angular cares about. From its perspective, *same #{_array}, no change, no display update*.
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| 
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|   We can fix that. Let's create a new #{_array} with the new hero appended and assign that to `heroes`.
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|   This time Angular detects that the #{_array} reference has changed.
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|   It executes the pipe and updates the display with the new #{_array} which includes the new flying hero.
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| 
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|   *If we **mutate** the #{_array}, no pipe is invoked and no display updated;
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|   if we **replace** the #{_array}, then the pipe executes and the display is updated*.
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|   The *Flying Heroes* extends the
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|   code with checkbox switches and additional displays to help us experience these effects.
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| 
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| figure.image-display
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|     img(src='/resources/images/devguide/pipes/flying-heroes-anim.gif' alt="Flying Heroes")
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| 
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| :marked
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|   Replacing the #{_array} is an efficient way to signal to Angular that it should update the display.
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|   When do we replace the #{_array}? When the data change.
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|   That's an easy rule to follow in *this toy* example
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|   where the only way to change the data is by adding a new hero.
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| 
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|   More often we don't know when the data have changed,
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|   especially in applications that mutate data in many ways,
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|   perhaps in application locations far away.
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|   A component in such an application usually can't know about those changes.
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|   Moreover, it's unwise to distort our component design to accommodate a pipe.
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|   We strive as much as possible to keep the component class independent of the HTML.
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|   The component should be unaware of pipes.
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| 
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|   Perhaps we should consider a different kind of pipe for filtering flying heroes, an *impure pipe*.
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| 
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| .l-main-section
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| :marked
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|   ## Pure and Impure Pipes
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| 
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|   There are two categories of pipes: **pure** and **impure**.
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|   Pipes are pure by default. Every pipe we've seen so far has been pure.
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|   We make a pipe impure by setting its pure flag to false. We could make the `FlyingHeroesPipe`
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|   impure like this:
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| 
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| +makeExample('pipes/ts/app/flying-heroes.pipe.ts', 'pipe-decorator')(format='.')
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| 
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| :marked
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|   Before we do that, let's understand the difference between *pure* and *impure*, starting with a *pure* pipe.
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| 
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|   ### Pure pipes
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| 
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| block pure-change
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|   :marked
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|     Angular executes a *pure pipe* only when it detects a *pure change* to the input value.
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|     A ***pure change*** is *either* a change to a primitive input value (`String`, `Number`, `Boolean`, `Symbol`)
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|     *or* a changed object reference (`Date`, `Array`, `Function`, `Object`).
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| 
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| :marked
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|   Angular ignores changes *within* (composite) objects.
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|   It won't call a pure pipe if we change an input month, add to an input #{_array}, or update an input object property.
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| 
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|   This may seem restrictive but is is also fast.
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|   An object reference check is fast — much faster than a deep check for
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|   differences — so Angular can quickly determine if it can skip both the
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|   pipe execution and a view update.
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| 
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|   For this reason, we prefer a pure pipe if we can live with the change detection strategy.
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|   When we can't, we *may* turn to the impure pipe.
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| 
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| .l-sub-section
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|   :marked
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|     Or we might not use a pipe at all.
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|     It may be better to pursue the pipe's purpose with a property of the component,
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|     a point we take up later.
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|     
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| :marked
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|   ### Impure pipes
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| 
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|   Angular executes an *impure pipe*  during *every* component change detection cycle.
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|   An impure pipe will be called a lot, as often as every keystroke or mouse-move.
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| 
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|   With that concern in mind, we must implement an impure pipe with great care.
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|   An expensive, long-running pipe could destroy the user experience.
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| 
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|   <a id="impure-flying-heroes"></a>
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|   ### An impure *FlyingHeroesPipe*
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| 
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|   A flip of the switch turns our `FlyingHeroesPipe` into a `FlyingHeroesImpurePipe`.
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|   Here's the complete implementation:
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| +makeTabs(
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|   'pipes/ts/app/flying-heroes.pipe.ts, pipes/ts/app/flying-heroes.pipe.ts',
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|   'impure, pure',
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|   'FlyingHeroesImpurePipe, FlyingHeroesPipe')(format='.')
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| 
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| :marked
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|   We inherit from `FlyingHeroesPipe` to prove the point that nothing changed internally.
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|   The only difference is the `pure` flag in the pipe metadata.
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| 
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|   This is a good candidate for an impure pipe because the `transform` function is trivial and fast.
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| +makeExample('pipes/ts/app/flying-heroes.pipe.ts','filter')(format='.')
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| 
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|   We can derive a `FlyingHeroesImpureComponent` that we derive from the `FlyingHeroesComponent`.
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| +makeExample('pipes/ts/app/flying-heroes-impure.component.html','template-flying-heroes','app/flying-heroes-impure.component.html (FlyingHeroesImpureComponent)')(format='.')
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| :marked
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|   The only substantive change is the pipe in the template.
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|   We can confirm in the <live-example></live-example> that the _flying heroes_
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|   display updates as we enter new heroes even when we mutate the `heroes` #{_array}.
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| 
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| - var _dollar = _docsFor === 'ts' ? '$' : '';
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| h3#async-pipe The impure #[i AsyncPipe]
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| :marked
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|   The Angular `AsyncPipe` is an interesting example of an impure pipe.
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|   The `AsyncPipe` accepts a `#{_Promise}` or `#{_Observable}` as input
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|   and subscribes to the input automatically, eventually returning the emitted value(s).
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| 
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|   It is also stateful.
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|   The pipe maintains a subscription to the input `#{_Observable}` and
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|   keeps delivering values from that `#{_Observable}` as they arrive.
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| 
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|   In this next example, we bind an `#{_Observable}` of message strings 
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|   (`message#{_dollar}`) to a view with the `async` pipe.
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| 
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| +makeExample('pipes/ts/app/hero-async-message.component.ts', null, 'app/hero-async-message.component.ts')
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| 
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| :marked
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|   The Async pipe saves boilerplate in the component code.
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|   The component doesn't have to subscribe to the async data source,
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|   it doesn't extract the resolved values and expose them for binding,
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|   and the component doesn't have to unsubscribe when it is destroyed
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|   (a potent source of memory leaks).
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| 
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|   ### An impure caching pipe
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| 
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|   Let's write one more impure pipe, a pipe that makes an HTTP request to the server.
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|   Normally, that's a horrible idea.
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|   It's probably a horrible idea no matter what we do.
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|   We're forging ahead anyway to make a point.
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|   Remember that impure pipes are called every few microseconds.
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|   If we're not careful, this pipe will punish the server with requests.
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| 
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|   We are careful. Our pipe only makes a server call if the request URL has changed.
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|   It caches the request URL and waits for a result which it also caches when it arrives.
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|   The pipe returns the cached result (which is null while a request is in flight)
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|   after every Angular call and only contacts the server as necessary.
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| 
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|   Here's the code, which uses the [Angular http](server-communication.html) facility
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|   to retrieve a `heroes.json` file:
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| 
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| +makeExample('pipes/ts/app/fetch-json.pipe.ts', null, 'app/fetch-json.pipe.ts')
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| :marked
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|   Then we demonstrate it in a harness component whose template defines two bindings to this pipe.
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| +makeExample('pipes/ts/app/hero-list.component.ts', 'template', 'app/hero-list.component.ts (template)')
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| :marked
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|   Despite the two bindings and what we know to be frequent pipe calls,
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|   the nework tab in the browser developer tools confirms that there is only one request for the file.
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| 
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|   The component renders like this:
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| 
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| figure.image-display
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|     img(src='/resources/images/devguide/pipes/hero-list.png' alt="Hero List")
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| 
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| :marked
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|   ### *JsonPipe*
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| 
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|   The second binding involving the `FetchPipe` uses more pipe chaining.
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|   We take the same fetched results displayed in the first binding
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|   and display them again, this time in JSON format by chaining through to the built-in `JsonPipe`.
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| 
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| .callout.is-helpful
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|   header Debugging with the json pipe
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|   :marked
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|     The [JsonPipe](../api/common/index/JsonPipe-class.html)
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|     provides an easy way to diagnosis a mysteriously failing data binding or
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|     inspect an object for future binding.
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| 
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| :marked
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|   Here's the complete component implementation:
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| 
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| +makeExample('pipes/ts/app/hero-list.component.ts', null, 'app/hero-list.component.ts')
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| 
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| a(id="pure-pipe-pure-fn")
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| :marked
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|   ### Pure pipes and pure functions
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| 
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|   A pure pipe uses pure functions.
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|   Pure functions process inputs and return values without detectable side-effects.
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|   Given the same input they should always return the same output.
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| 
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|   The pipes we saw earlier in this chapter were implemented with pure functions.
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|   The built-in `DatePipe` is a pure pipe with a pure function implementation.
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|   So is our `ExponentialStrengthPipe`.
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|   So is our `FlyingHeroesPipe`.
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|   A few steps back we reviewed the `FlyingHeroesImpurePipe` — *an impure pipe with a pure function*.
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|   
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|   But a *pure pipe* must always be implemented with a *pure function*. Failure to heed this warning will bring about many a console errors regarding expressions that have changed after they were checked.
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| 
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| .l-main-section
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| :marked
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|   ## Next Steps
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| 
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|   Pipes are a great way to encapsulate and share common display-value
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|   transformations. We use them like styles, dropping them
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|   into our templates expressions to enrich the appeal and usability
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|   of our views.
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| 
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|   Explore Angular's inventory of built-in pipes in the [API Reference](../api/#!?apiFilter=pipe).
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|   Try writing a custom pipe and perhaps contributing it to the community.
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| 
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| a(id="no-filter-pipe")
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| .l-main-section
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| :marked
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|   ## No *FilterPipe* or *OrderByPipe*
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| 
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|   Angular does not ship with pipes for filtering or sorting lists.
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|   Developers familiar with Angular 1 know these as `filter` and `orderBy`.
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|   There are no equivalents in Angular 2.
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| 
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|   This is not an oversight. Angular 2 is unlikely to offer such pipes because
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|   (a) they perform poorly and (b) they prevent aggressive minification.
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|   Both `filter` and `orderBy` require parameters that reference object properties.
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|   We learned earlier that such pipes must be  [*impure*](#pure-and-impure-pipes) and that
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|   Angular calls impure pipes in almost every change detection cycle.
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| 
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|   Filtering and especially sorting are expensive operations.
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|   The user experience can degrade severely for even moderate sized lists when Angular calls these pipe methods many times per second.
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|   The `filter` and `orderBy` have often been abused in Angular 1 apps, leading to complaints that Angular itself is slow.
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|   That charge is fair in the indirect sense that Angular 1 prepared this performance trap
 | |
|   by offering `filter` and `orderBy` in the first place.
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| 
 | |
|   The minification hazard is also compelling if less obvious. Imagine a sorting pipe applied to a list of heroes.
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|   We might sort the list by hero `name` and `planet` of origin properties something like this:
 | |
| code-example(language="html")
 | |
|   <!-- NOT REAL CODE! -->
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|   <div *ngFor="let hero of heroes | orderBy:'name,planet'"></div>
 | |
| :marked
 | |
|   We identify the sort fields by text strings, expecting the pipe to reference a property value by indexing
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|   (e.g., `hero['name']`).
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|   Unfortunately, aggressive minification *munges* the `Hero` property names so that `Hero.name` and `Hero.planet`
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|   becomes something like `Hero.a` and `Hero.b`. Clearly `hero['name']` is not going to work.
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| 
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|   Some of us may not care to minify this aggressively. That's *our* choice.
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|   But the Angular product should not prevent someone else from minifying aggressively.
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|   Therefore, the Angular team decided that everything shipped in Angular will minify safely.
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| 
 | |
|   The Angular team and many experienced Angular developers strongly recommend that you move
 | |
|   filtering and sorting logic into the component itself.
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|   The component can expose a `filteredHeroes` or `sortedHeroes` property and take control
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|   over when and how often to execute the supporting logic.
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|   Any capabilities that you would have put in a pipe and shared across the app can be
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|   written in a filtering/sorting service and injected into the component.
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| 
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|   If these performance and minification considerations do not apply to you, you can always create your own such pipes
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|   (along the lines of the [FlyingHeroesPipe](#impure-flying-heroes)) or find them in the community.
 |