angular-cn/aio/content/guide/ngmodule-api.md

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NgModule API

Prerequisites

A basic understanding of the following concepts:


Purpose of @NgModule

At a high level, NgModules are a way to organize Angular apps and they accomplish this through the metadata in the @NgModule decorator. The metadata falls into three categories:

  • Static: Compiler configuration which tells the compiler about directive selectors and where in templates the directives should be applied through selector matching. This is configured via the declarations array.
  • Runtime: Injector configuration via the providers array.
  • Composability/Grouping: Bringing NgModules together and making them available via the imports and exports arrays.
@NgModule({
 // Static, that is compiler configuration
 declarations: [], // Configure the selectors
 entryComponents: [], // Generate the host factory

 // Runtime, or injector configuration
 providers: [], // Runtime injector configuration

 // Composability / Grouping
 imports: [], // composing NgModules together
 exports: [] // making NgModules available to other parts of the app
})

@NgModule metadata

The following table summarizes the NgModule metadata properties.

Property Description
declarations
 A list of [declarable](guide/ngmodule-faq#q-declarable) classes,
 (*components*, *directives*, and *pipes*) that _belong to this module_.
  1. When compiling a template, you need to determine a set of selectors which should be used for triggering their corresponding directives.

  2. The template is compiled within a context of an NgModule—the NgModule which this template's component is declared in—which determines the set of selectors using the following rules: a) All selectors of directives listed in declarations b) All exported selectors of imported NgModules.

    Components, directives, and pipes must belong to exactly one module. The compiler emits an error if you try to declare the same class in more than one module.

    Don't re-declare a class imported from another module.

providers
 A list of dependency-injection providers.

 Angular registers these providers with the NgModule's injector.
 If it is the NgModule used for bootstrapping that it is the root injector.

 These services become available for injection into any component, directive, pipe or service which is a child of this injector. 

 A lazy-loaded module has its own injector which
 is typically a child of the application root injector.

 Lazy-loaded services are scoped to the lazy module's injector.
 If a lazy-loaded module also provides the `UserService`,
 any component created within that module's context (such as by router navigation)
 gets the local instance of the service, not the instance in the root application injector.

 Components in external modules continue to receive the instance provided by their injectors.

 For more information on injector hierarchy and scoping, see [Providers](guide/providers).
imports
 A list of modules which should be folded into this module. Folded means it is
 as if all of the imported NgModule properties were declared here.

 Specifically, it is as if the list of modules whose exported components, directives, or pipes
 are referenced by the component templates were declared in this module.

 A component template can [reference](guide/ngmodule-faq#q-template-reference) another component, directive, or pipe
 when the reference is declared in this module
 or if the imported module has exported it.
 For example, a component can use the `NgIf` and `NgFor` directives only if the
 module has imported the Angular `CommonModule` (perhaps indirectly by importing `BrowserModule`).

 You can import many standard directives from the `CommonModule`
 but some familiar directives belong to other modules.
 For example, you can use `[(ngModel)]` only
 after importing the Angular `FormsModule`.
exports
 A list of declarations—*component*, *directive*, and *pipe* classes—that
 an importing module can use.

 Exported declarations are the module's _public API_.
 A component in another module can [use](guide/ngmodule-faq#q-template-reference) _this_ module's `UserComponent`
 if it imports this module and this module exports `UserComponent`.

 Declarations are private by default.
 If this module does _not_ export `UserComponent`, than only the components within where the `UserComponent` has been declared can use `UserComponent.

 Importing a module does _not_ automatically re-export the imported module's imports.
 Module 'B' can't use `ngIf` just because it imported module `A` which imported `CommonModule`.
 Module 'B' must import `CommonModule` itself.

 A module can list another module among its `exports`, in which case
 all of that module's public components, directives, and pipes are exported.

 [Re-export](guide/ngmodule-faq#q-reexport) makes module transitivity explicit.
 If Module 'A' re-exports `CommonModule` and Module 'B' imports Module 'A',
 Module 'B' components can use `ngIf` even though 'B' itself didn't import `CommonModule`.
bootstrap
 A list of components that are automatically bootstrapped.

 Usually there's only one component in this list, the _root component_ of the application.

 Angular can launch with multiple bootstrap components,
 each with its own location in the host web page.

 A bootstrap component is automatically added to `entryComponents`.
entryComponents
 A list of components that can be dynamically loaded into the view.

 By default, an Angular app always has at least one entry component, the root component, `AppComponent`. Its purpose is to serve as a point of entry into the app, that is, you bootstrap it to launch the app.

 Routed components are also _entry components_ because they need to be loaded dynamically.
 The router creates them and drops them into the DOM near a `<router-outlet>`.

 While the bootstrapped and routed components are _entry components_,
 you don't have to add them to a module's `entryComponents` list,
 as they are added implicitly.

 Angular automatically adds components in the module's `bootstrap` and route definitions into the `entryComponents` list.

That leaves only components bootstrapped using one of the imperative techniques, such as ViewComponentRef.createComponent() as undiscoverable.

 Dynamic component loading is not common in most apps beyond the router. If you need to dynamically load components, you must add these components to the `entryComponents` list yourself.

 For more information, see [Entry Components](guide/entry-components).

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