15 KiB
Writing structural directives
This topic demonstrates how to create a structural directive and provides conceptual information on how directives work, how Angular interprets shorthand, and how to add template guard properties to catch template type errors.
For the example application that this page describes, see the .
For more information on Angular's built-in structural directives, such as NgIf
, NgForOf
, and NgSwitch
, see Built-in directives.
{@a unless}
Creating a structural directive
This section guides you through creating an UnlessDirective
and how to set condition
values.
The UnlessDirective
does the opposite of NgIf
, and condition
values can be set to true
or false
.
NgIf
displays the template content when the condition is true
.
UnlessDirective
displays the content when the condition is false
.
Following is the UnlessDirective
selector, appUnless
, applied to the paragraph element.
When condition
is false
, the browser displays the sentence.
- Using the Angular CLI, run the following command, where
unless
is the name of the directive:
ng generate directive unless
Angular creates the directive class and specifies the CSS selector, appUnless
, that identifies the directive in a template.
- Import
Input
,TemplateRef
, andViewContainerRef
.
- Inject
TemplateRef
andViewContainerRef
in the directive constructor as private variables.
The UnlessDirective
creates an embedded view from the Angular-generated <ng-template>
and inserts that view in a view container adjacent to the directive's original <p>
host element.
TemplateRef
helps you get to the <ng-template>
contents and ViewContainerRef
accesses the view container.
- Add an
appUnless
@Input()
property with a setter.
Angular sets the appUnless
property whenever the value of the condition changes.
* If the condition is falsy and Angular hasn't created the view previously, the setter causes the view container to create the embedded view from the template.
* If the condition is truthy and the view is currently displayed, the setter clears the container, which disposes of the view.
The complete directive is as follows:
Testing the directive
In this section, you'll update your application to test the UnlessDirective
.
- Add a
condition
set tofalse
in theAppComponent
.
- Update the template to use the directive.
Here,
*appUnless
is on two<p>
tags with oppositecondition
values, onetrue
and onefalse
.
The asterisk is shorthand that marks appUnless
as a structural directive.
When the condition
is falsy, the top (A) paragraph appears and the bottom (B) paragraph disappears.
When the condition
is truthy, the top (A) paragraph disappears and the bottom (B) paragraph appears.
- To change and display the value of
condition
in the browser, add markup that displays the status and a button.
To verify that the directive works, click the button to change the value of condition
.
{@a shorthand} {@a asterisk}
Structural directive shorthand
The asterisk, *
, syntax on a structural directive, such as *ngIf
, is shorthand that Angular interprets into a longer form.
Angular transforms the asterisk in front of a structural directive into an <ng-template>
that surrounds the host element and its descendants.
The following is an example of *ngIf
that displays the hero's name if hero
exists:
The *ngIf
directive moves to the <ng-template>
where it becomes a property binding in square brackets, [ngIf]
.
The rest of the <div>
, including its class attribute, moves inside the <ng-template>
.
Angular does not create a real <ng-template>
element, instead rendering only the <div>
and a comment node placeholder to the DOM.
<!--bindings={
"ng-reflect-ng-if": "[object Object]"
}-->
<div _ngcontent-c0>Mr. Nice</div>
The following example compares the shorthand use of the asterisk in *ngFor
with the longhand <ng-template>
form:
Here, everything related to the ngFor
structural directive applies to the <ng-template>
.
All other bindings and attributes on the element apply to the <div>
element within the <ng-template>
.
Other modifiers on the host element, in addition to the ngFor
string, remain in place as the element moves inside the <ng-template>
.
In this example, the [class.odd]="odd"
stays on the <div>
.
The let
keyword declares a template input variable that you can reference within the template.
The input variables in this example are hero
, i
, and odd
.
The parser translates let hero
, let i
, and let odd
into variables named let-hero
, let-i
, and let-odd
.
The let-i
and let-odd
variables become let i=index
and let odd=odd
.
Angular sets i
and odd
to the current value of the context's index
and odd
properties.
The parser applies PascalCase to all directives and prefixes them with the directive's attribute name, such as ngFor.
For example, the ngFor
input properties, of
and trackBy
, map to ngForOf
and ngForTrackBy
.
As the NgFor
directive loops through the list, it sets and resets properties of its own context object.
These properties can include, but aren't limited to, index
, odd
, and a special property
named $implicit
.
Angular sets let-hero
to the value of the context's $implicit
property, which NgFor
has initialized with the hero for the current iteration.
For more information, see the NgFor API and NgForOf API documentation.
Creating template fragments with <ng-template>
Angular's <ng-template>
element defines a template that doesn't render anything by default.
With <ng-template>
, you can render the content manually for full control over how the content displays.
If there is no structural directive and you wrap some elements in an <ng-template>
, those elements disappear.
In the following example, Angular does not render the middle "Hip!" in the phrase "Hip! Hip! Hooray!" because of the surrounding <ng-template>
.
Structural directive syntax reference
When you write your own structural directives, use the following syntax:
*:prefix="( :let | :expression ) (';' | ',')? ( :let | :as | :keyExp )*"
The following tables describe each portion of the structural directive grammar:
prefix |
HTML attribute key |
key |
HTML attribute key |
local |
local variable name used in the template |
export |
value exported by the directive under a given name |
expression |
standard Angular expression |
keyExp = :key ":"? :expression ("as" :local)? ";"? |
||
let = "let" :local "=" :export ";"? |
||
as = :export "as" :local ";"? |
How Angular translates shorthand
Angular translates structural directive shorthand into the normal binding syntax as follows:
Shorthand | Translation |
---|---|
prefix and naked expression |
[prefix]="expression" |
keyExp |
[prefixKey] "expression"
(let-prefixKey="export")
Notice that the prefix
is added to the key
|
let |
let-local="export" |
Shorthand examples
The following table provides shorthand examples:
Shorthand | How Angular interprets the syntax |
---|---|
*ngFor="let item of [1,2,3]" |
<ng-template ngFor let-item [ngForOf]="[1,2,3]"> |
*ngFor="let item of [1,2,3] as items; trackBy: myTrack; index as i" |
<ng-template ngFor let-item [ngForOf]="[1,2,3]" let-items="ngForOf" [ngForTrackBy]="myTrack" let-i="index">
|
*ngIf="exp" |
<ng-template [ngIf]="exp"> |
*ngIf="exp as value" |
<ng-template [ngIf]="exp" let-value="ngIf"> |
{@a directive-type-checks}
Improving template type checking for custom directives
You can improve template type checking for custom directives by adding template guard properties to your directive definition. These properties help the Angular template type checker find mistakes in the template at compile time, which can avoid runtime errors. These properties are as follows:
- A property
ngTemplateGuard_(someInputProperty)
lets you specify a more accurate type for an input expression within the template. - The
ngTemplateContextGuard
static property declares the type of the template context.
This section provides examples of both kinds of type-guard property. For more information, see Template type checking.
{@a narrowing-input-types}
Making in-template type requirements more specific with template guards
A structural directive in a template controls whether that template is rendered at run time, based on its input expression. To help the compiler catch template type errors, you should specify as closely as possible the required type of a directive's input expression when it occurs inside the template.
A type guard function narrows the expected type of an input expression to a subset of types that might be passed to the directive within the template at run time. You can provide such a function to help the type-checker infer the proper type for the expression at compile time.
For example, the NgIf
implementation uses type-narrowing to ensure that the
template is only instantiated if the input expression to *ngIf
is truthy.
To provide the specific type requirement, the NgIf
directive defines a static property ngTemplateGuard_ngIf: 'binding'
.
The binding
value is a special case for a common kind of type-narrowing where the input expression is evaluated in order to satisfy the type requirement.
To provide a more specific type for an input expression to a directive within the template, add an ngTemplateGuard_xx
property to the directive, where the suffix to the static property name, xx
, is the @Input()
field name.
The value of the property can be either a general type-narrowing function based on its return type, or the string "binding"
, as in the case of NgIf
.
For example, consider the following structural directive that takes the result of a template expression as an input:
export type Loaded = { type: 'loaded', data: T }; export type Loading = { type: 'loading' }; export type LoadingState = Loaded | Loading; export class IfLoadedDirective { @Input('ifLoaded') set state(state: LoadingState) {} static ngTemplateGuard_state(dir: IfLoadedDirective, expr: LoadingState): expr is Loaded { return true; }; }export interface Person { name: string; }
@Component({
template: <div *ifLoaded="state">{{ state.data }}</div>
,
})
export class AppComponent {
state: LoadingState;
}
In this example, the LoadingState<T>
type permits either of two states, Loaded<T>
or Loading
. The expression used as the directive’s state
input is of the umbrella type LoadingState
, as it’s unknown what the loading state is at that point.
The IfLoadedDirective
definition declares the static field ngTemplateGuard_state
, which expresses the narrowing behavior.
Within the AppComponent
template, the *ifLoaded
structural directive should render this template only when state
is actually Loaded<Person>
.
The type guard allows the type checker to infer that the acceptable type of state
within the template is a Loaded<T>
, and further infer that T
must be an instance of Person
.
{@a narrowing-context-type}
Typing the directive's context
If your structural directive provides a context to the instantiated template, you can properly type it inside the template by providing a static ngTemplateContextGuard
function.
The following snippet shows an example of such a function.
// …
}