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Template expression operators
The Angular template expression language employs a subset of JavaScript syntax supplemented with a few special operators for specific scenarios. The next sections cover three of these operators:
See the for a working example containing the code snippets in this guide.
{@a pipe}
The pipe operator (|
)
The result of an expression might require some transformation before you're ready to use it in a binding. For example, you might display a number as a currency, change text to uppercase, or filter a list and sort it.
Pipes are simple functions that accept an input value and return a transformed value.
They're easy to apply within template expressions, using the pipe operator (|
):
The pipe operator passes the result of an expression on the left to a pipe function on the right.
You can chain expressions through multiple pipes:
And you can also apply parameters to a pipe:
The json
pipe is particularly helpful for debugging bindings:
The generated output would look something like this:
{ "name": "Telephone", "manufactureDate": "1980-02-25T05:00:00.000Z", "price": 98 }The pipe operator has a higher precedence than the ternary operator (?:
),
which means a ? b : c | x
is parsed as a ? b : (c | x)
.
Nevertheless, for a number of reasons,
the pipe operator cannot be used without parentheses in the first and second operands of ?:
.
A good practice is to use parentheses in the third operand too.
{@a safe-navigation-operator}
The safe navigation operator ( ?
) and null property paths
The Angular safe navigation operator, ?
, guards against null
and undefined
values in property paths. Here, it protects against a view render failure if item
is null
.
If item
is null
, the view still renders but the displayed value is blank; you see only "The item name is:" with nothing after it.
Consider the next example, with a nullItem
.
Since there is no safe navigation operator and nullItem
is null
, JavaScript and Angular would throw a null
reference error and break the rendering process of Angular:
Sometimes however, null
values in the property
path may be OK under certain circumstances,
especially when the value starts out null but the data arrives eventually.
With the safe navigation operator, ?
, Angular stops evaluating the expression when it hits the first null
value and renders the view without errors.
It works perfectly with long property paths such as a?.b?.c?.d
.
{@a non-null-assertion-operator}
The non-null assertion operator ( !
)
As of Typescript 2.0, you can enforce strict null checking with the --strictNullChecks
flag. TypeScript then ensures that no variable is unintentionally null
or undefined
.
In this mode, typed variables disallow null
and undefined
by default. The type checker throws an error if you leave a variable unassigned or try to assign null
or undefined
to a variable whose type disallows null
and undefined
.
The type checker also throws an error if it can't determine whether a variable will be null
or undefined
at runtime. You tell the type checker not to throw an error by applying the postfix
non-null assertion operator, !.
The Angular non-null assertion operator, !
, serves the same purpose in
an Angular template. For example, you can assert that item
properties are also defined.
When the Angular compiler turns your template into TypeScript code,
it prevents TypeScript from reporting that item.color
might be null
or undefined
.
Unlike the safe navigation operator,
the non-null assertion operator does not guard against null
or undefined
.
Rather, it tells the TypeScript type checker to suspend strict null
checks for a specific property expression.
The non-null assertion operator, !
, is optional with the exception that you must use it when you turn on strict null checks.
{@a any-type-cast-function}
The $any()
type cast function
Sometimes a binding expression triggers a type error during AOT compilation and it is not possible or difficult to fully specify the type.
To silence the error, you can use the $any()
cast function to cast
the expression to the any
type as in the following example:
When the Angular compiler turns this template into TypeScript code,
it prevents TypeScript from reporting that bestByDate
is not a member of the item
object when it runs type checking on the template.
The $any()
cast function also works with this
to allow access to undeclared members of
the component.
The $any()
cast function works anywhere in a binding expression where a method call is valid.