545 lines
		
	
	
		
			27 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Plaintext
		
	
	
	
	
	
			
		
		
	
	
			545 lines
		
	
	
		
			27 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Plaintext
		
	
	
	
	
	
| include ../../../../_includes/_util-fns
 | |
| 
 | |
| :marked
 | |
|   Angular 2 is a framework to help us build client applications in HTML and JavaScript.
 | |
|   
 | |
|   The framework consists of several cooperating libraries, some of them core and some optional.
 | |
|   
 | |
|   We write applications by composing HTML *templates* with Angularized-markup, 
 | |
|   writing *component* classes to manage those templates, adding application logic in *services*,
 | |
|   and handing the top root component to Angular's *bootstrapper*. 
 | |
|   
 | |
|   Angular takes over, presenting our application content in a browser and responding to user interactions
 | |
|   according to the instructions we provided.
 | |
|   
 | |
| <!-- figure img(src="/resources/images/devguide/architecture/airplane.png" alt="Us" align="left" style="width:200px; margin-left:-40px;margin-right:10px" ) -->
 | |
| :marked
 | |
|   Of course there is more to it than this. We'll learn the details when we dive into the guide chapters.
 | |
|   Let's get the big picture first.
 | |
| 
 | |
| figure
 | |
|   img(src="/resources/images/devguide/architecture/overview2.png" alt="overview" style="margin-left:-40px;" width="700")
 | |
| :marked
 | |
|   The architecture diagram identifies the eight main building blocks of an Angular 2 application:
 | |
|   1. [Module](#module)   
 | |
|   1. [Component](#component)
 | |
|   1. [Template](#template)
 | |
|   1. [Metadata](#metadata)
 | |
|   1. [Data Binding](#data-binding)
 | |
|   1. [Service](#service)
 | |
|   1. [Directive](#directive)
 | |
|   1. [Dependency Injection](#dependency-injection)
 | |
| 
 | |
|   Learn these eight and we're on our way.
 | |
| 
 | |
| .l-sub-section
 | |
|   :marked
 | |
|       The code referenced in this chapter is available as a [live example](/resources/live-examples/architecture/ts/plnkr.html).
 | |
| <a id="module"></a>
 | |
| .l-main-section
 | |
| :marked
 | |
|   ## The Module
 | |
| figure
 | |
|   img(src="/resources/images/devguide/architecture/module.png" alt="Component" align="left" style="width:240px; margin-left:-40px;margin-right:10px" )
 | |
| :marked
 | |
|   Angular apps are modular. 
 | |
|   
 | |
|   In general we assemble our application from many **modules**.
 | |
|   
 | |
|   A typical module is a cohesive block of code dedicated to a single purpose.
 | |
|   A module **exports** something of value in that code, typically one thing such as a class.
 | |
|   <br clear="all"><br>
 | |
| .l-sub-section
 | |
|   :marked
 | |
|      ### Modules are optional
 | |
|      We highly recommend modular design. TypeScript has great support for ES2015 module syntax and our chapters assume we're taking a modular
 | |
|      approach using that syntax. That's why we list *Module* among the basic building blocks.
 | |
|      
 | |
|      Angular itself doesn't require a modular approach nor this particular syntax. Don't use it if you don't want it.
 | |
|      Each chapter has plenty to offer after you steer clear of the `import` and `export` statements.
 | |
|      
 | |
|      Find setup and organization clues in the JavaScript track (select it from the combobox at the top of this page) 
 | |
|      which demonstrates Angular 2 development with plain old JavaScript and no module system. 
 | |
| :marked
 | |
|   Perhaps the first module we meet is a module that exports a *component* class. 
 | |
|   The component is one of the basic Angular blocks, we write a lot of them,
 | |
|   and we'll talk about components in the next segment. For the moment it is enough to know that a
 | |
|   component class is the kind of thing we'd export from a module.
 | |
|   
 | |
|   Most applications have an `AppComponent`. By convention, we'll find it in a file named `app.component.ts`. 
 | |
|   Look inside such a file and we'll see an `export` statement like this one.
 | |
| +makeExample('architecture/ts/app/app.component.ts', 'export', 'app/app.component.ts (excerpt)')(format=".")
 | |
| :marked
 | |
|   The `export` statement tells TypeScript that this is a module whose
 | |
|   `AppComponent` class is public and accessible to other modules of the application.
 | |
|   
 | |
|   When we need a reference to the `AppComponent`, we **import** it like this:
 | |
| +makeExample('architecture/ts/app/boot.ts', 'import', 'app/boot.ts (excerpt)')(format=".")
 | |
| :marked
 | |
|   The `import` statement tells the system it can get an `AppComponent` from a module named `app.component`
 | |
|   located in a neighboring file. 
 | |
|   The **module name** (AKA module id) is often the same as the filename without its extension.
 | |
|   ### Library Modules 
 | |
| figure
 | |
|   img(src="/resources/images/devguide/architecture/library-module.png" alt="Component" align="left" style="width:240px; margin-left:-40px;margin-right:10px" )
 | |
| :marked
 | |
|   Some modules are libraries of other modules.
 | |
|   
 | |
|   Angular itself ships as a collection of library modules called "barrels". 
 | |
|   Each Angular library is actually a public facade over several logically related private modules.
 | |
|   
 | |
|   The `angular2/core` library is the primary Angular library module from which we get most of what we need.
 | |
|   <br clear="all">
 | |
|   
 | |
|   There are other important Angular library modules too such as `angular2/common`, `angular2/router`, and `angular2/http`.
 | |
| .l-sub-section
 | |
|   :marked
 | |
|      Learn more about how Angular organizes and distributes modules 
 | |
|      in "[Modules, barrels and bundles](https://github.com/angular/angular/blob/master/modules/angular2/docs/bundles/overview.md)".  
 | |
| :marked
 | |
|   We import what we need from an Angular library module in much the same way. 
 | |
|   For example, we import the Angular **`Component` *function*** from the *angular2/core* module like this:
 | |
| +makeExample('architecture/ts/app/app.component.ts', 'import')(format=".")
 | |
| :marked
 | |
|   Compare that syntax to our previous import of `AppComponent`.
 | |
| +makeExample('architecture/ts/app/boot.ts', 'import')(format=".")
 | |
| :marked
 | |
|   Notice the difference? 
 | |
|   In the first case, when importing from an Angular library module,
 | |
|   the import statement refers to the bare module name, `angular2/core`, *without a path prefix*.
 | |
|   
 | |
|   When we import from one of *our* own files, we prefix the module name with the file path.
 | |
|   In this example we specify  a relative file path (./). That means the
 | |
|   source module is in the same folder (./) as the module importing it.
 | |
|   We could path up and around the application folder structure if the source module were somewhere else.
 | |
| .l-sub-section
 | |
|   :marked
 | |
|     We import and export in the ECMAScript 2015 (ES2015) module syntax. 
 | |
|     Learn more about that syntax [here](http://www.2ality.com/2014/09/es6-modules-final.html)
 | |
|     and many other places on the web.
 | |
|     
 | |
|     The infrastructure *behind* module loading and importing is an important subject.
 | |
|     But it's a subject outside the scope of this introduction to Angular. 
 | |
|     While we're focused on our application, *import* and *export*
 | |
|     is about all we need to know.
 | |
| :marked
 | |
|   The key take aways are:
 | |
|   * Angular apps are composed of modules.
 | |
|   * Modules export things — classes, function, values — that other modules import.
 | |
|   * We prefer to write our application as a collection of modules, each module exporting one thing.
 | |
|   
 | |
|   The first module we write will most likely export a component.
 | |
| .l-main-section
 | |
| <a id="component"></a>
 | |
| :marked
 | |
|   ## The Component
 | |
| figure
 | |
|   img(src="/resources/images/devguide/architecture/hero-component.png" alt="Component" align="left" style="width:200px; margin-left:-40px;margin-right:10px" )
 | |
| :marked
 | |
|   A **Component** controls a patch of screen real estate that we could call a *view*. 
 | |
|   The shell at the application root with navigation links, that list of heroes, the hero editor ... 
 | |
|   they're all views controlled by Components.
 | |
|   
 | |
|   We define a Component's application logic - what it does to support the view - inside a class.
 | |
|   The class interacts with the view through an API of properties and methods. 
 | |
|   
 | |
|   <a id="component-code"></a>
 | |
|   A `HeroListComponent`, for example, might have a `heroes` property that returns an array of heroes
 | |
|   that it acquired from a service.
 | |
|   It might have a `selectHero()` method that sets a `selectedHero` property when the user click on a hero from that list.
 | |
|   It might be a class like this:
 | |
| 
 | |
| +makeExample('architecture/ts/app/hero-list.component.ts', 'class', 'app/hero-list.component.ts')
 | |
| :marked
 | |
|   Angular creates, updates, and destroys components as the user moves through the application.
 | |
|   The developer can take action at each moment in this lifecycle through optional [Lifecycle Hooks](lifecycle-hooks.html).
 | |
| .l-sub-section
 | |
|   :marked
 | |
|     We're not showing those hooks in this example 
 | |
|     but we are making a mental note to find out about them later.
 | |
|     
 | |
|     We may wonder who is calling that constructor? Who provides the service parameter?
 | |
|     For the moment, have faith that Angular will call the constructor and deliver an
 | |
|     appropriate `HeroService` when we need it.
 | |
| 
 | |
| .l-main-section
 | |
| <a id="template"></a>
 | |
| :marked
 | |
|   ## The Template
 | |
| figure
 | |
|   img(src="/resources/images/devguide/architecture/template.png" alt="Template" align="left" style="width:200px; margin-left:-40px;margin-right:10px" )
 | |
| :marked
 | |
|   We define a Component's view with its companion **template**. A template is a form of HTML
 | |
|   that tells Angular how to render the Component.
 | |
| 
 | |
|   A template looks like regular HTML much of the time ... and then it gets a bit strange. Here is a
 | |
|   template for our `HeroList` component.
 | |
| +makeExample('architecture/ts/app/hero-list.component.html',null,'app/hero-list.component.html')
 | |
| :marked
 | |
|   We recognize `<h2>` and  `<div>`. 
 | |
|   But there's other markup that no one told us about in school.
 | |
|   What are `*ngFor`, `{{hero.name}}`, `(click)`, `[hero]`, and `<hero-detail>`?
 | |
|   
 | |
|   These are examples of Angular's [template syntax](template-syntax.html). 
 | |
|   We will grow accustomed to that syntax and may even learn to love it.
 | |
|   We'll begin to explain it in a moment.
 | |
|   
 | |
|   Before we do, focus attention on the last line. 
 | |
|   The `<hero-detail>` tag is a custom element representing the `HeroDetailComponent`.
 | |
|   
 | |
|   The `HeroDetailComponent` is a *different* component than the `HeroListComponent` we've been reviewing.
 | |
|   The `HeroDetailComponent` (code not shown) presents facts about a particular hero, the
 | |
|   hero that the user selects from the list presented by the the `HeroListComponent`.
 | |
|   The `HeroDetailComponent` is a **child** of the the `HeroListComponent`.
 | |
| 
 | |
| figure
 | |
|   img(src="/resources/images/devguide/architecture/component-tree.png" alt="Metadata" align="left" style="width:300px; margin-left:-40px;margin-right:10px" )
 | |
| :marked
 | |
|   Notice how `<hero-detail>` rests comfortably among the HTML elements we already know. 
 | |
|   We can mix ... and will mix ... our custom components with native HTML in the same layouts.
 | |
|   
 | |
|   And in this manner we can and will compose complex component trees to build out our richly featured application.
 | |
| <br clear="all">
 | |
| 
 | |
| .l-main-section
 | |
| <a id="metadata"></a>
 | |
| :marked
 | |
|   ## Angular Metadata
 | |
| figure
 | |
|   img(src="/resources/images/devguide/architecture/metadata.png" alt="Metadata" align="left" style="width:150px; margin-left:-40px;margin-right:10px" )
 | |
| :marked
 | |
| <p style="padding-top:10px">Metadata tells Angular how to process a class.</p>
 | |
| <br clear="all">
 | |
| :marked
 | |
|   [Looking back](#component-code) at the `HeroListComponent`, we see that it's just a class.
 | |
|   There is no evidence of a framework, no "Angular" in it at all.
 | |
|   
 | |
|   In fact, it really is *just a class*. It's not a component until we *tell Angular about it*.
 | |
|   
 | |
|   We tell Angular that `HeroListComponent` is a component by attaching **metadata** to the class.
 | |
|   
 | |
|   The easy way to attach metadata in TypeScript is with a **decorator**. 
 | |
|   Here's some metadata for `HeroListComponent`:
 | |
| +makeExample('architecture/ts/app/hero-list.component.ts', 'metadata', 'app/hero-list.component.ts (metadata)')
 | |
| :marked
 | |
|   Here we see the `@Component` decorator which (no surprise) identifies the class
 | |
|   immediately below it as a Component class.
 | |
|   
 | |
|   A decorator is a function. Decorators often have a configuration parameter. 
 | |
|   The `@Component` decorator takes a required configuration object with the
 | |
|   information Angular needs to create and present the component and its view.
 | |
|   
 | |
|   Here we see a few of the possible `@Component` configuration options:
 | |
|   
 | |
|   * `selector` - a css selector that tells Angular to create and insert an instance of this component 
 | |
|   where it finds a `<hero-list>` tag in *parent* HTML. 
 | |
|   If the template of the application shell (a Component) contained
 | |
| <div style="margin-left:30px">
 | |
| code-example(language="html").
 | |
|     <hero-list></hero-list>
 | |
| </div>  
 | |
| :marked
 | |
|   >Angular inserts an instance of the `HeroListComponent` view between those tags.
 | |
|   
 | |
|   * `templateUrl` - the address of this component's template which we showed [above](#template).
 | |
|   
 | |
|   * `directives` - an array of the Components or Directives that *this* template requires.
 | |
|   We saw in the last line of our template that we expect Angular to insert a `HeroDetailComponent`
 | |
|   in the space indicated by `<hero-detail>` tags. 
 | |
|   Angular will do so only if we mention the `HeroDetailComponent` in this `directives` array.
 | |
|   
 | |
|   * `providers` - an array of **dependency injection providers** for services that the component requires.
 | |
|   This is one way to tell Angular that our component's constructor requires a `HeroService` 
 | |
|   so it can get the list of heroes to display. We'll get to dependency injection in a moment.
 | |
| figure
 | |
|   img(src="/resources/images/devguide/architecture/template-metadata-component.png" alt="Metadata" align="left" style="height:200px; margin-left:-40px;margin-right:10px" )
 | |
| :marked
 | |
|   The `@Component` function takes the configuration object and turns it into metadata that it attaches
 | |
|   to the component class definition. Angular discovers this metadata at runtime and thus knows how to do "the right thing".
 | |
|   
 | |
|   The template, metadata, and component together describe the view.
 | |
| 
 | |
|   We apply other metadata decorators in a similar fashion to guide Angular behavior. 
 | |
|   The `@Injectable`, `@Input`, `@Output`, `@RouterConfig` are a few of the more popular decorators
 | |
|   we'll master as our Angular knowledge grows.
 | |
| <br clear="all">
 | |
| :marked
 | |
|   The architectural take-away is that we must add metadata to our code
 | |
|   so that Angular knows what to do.
 | |
| 
 | |
| .l-main-section
 | |
| <a id="data-binding"></a>
 | |
| :marked
 | |
|   ## Data Binding
 | |
|   Without a framework, we would be responsible for pushing data values into the HTML controls and turning user responses
 | |
|   into actions and value updates. Writing such push/pull logic by hand is tedious, error-prone and a nightmare to
 | |
|   read as the experienced jQuery programmer can attest.
 | |
| figure
 | |
|   img(src="/resources/images/devguide/architecture/databinding.png" alt="Data Binding" style="width:220px; float:left; margin-left:-40px;margin-right:20px" )
 | |
| :marked
 | |
|   Angular supports **data binding**, 
 | |
|   a mechanism for coordinating parts of a template with parts of a component.
 | |
|   We add binding markup to the template HTML to tell Angular how to connect both sides.
 | |
|   
 | |
|   There are four forms of data binding syntax. Each form has a direction - to the DOM, from the DOM, or in both directions -
 | |
|   as indicated by the arrows in the diagram.
 | |
| <br clear="all">
 | |
| :marked
 | |
|   We saw three forms of data binding in our [example](#template) template:
 | |
| +makeExample('architecture/ts/app/hero-list.component.1.html', 'binding', 'app/hero-list.component.html (excerpt)')(format=".")
 | |
| :marked
 | |
|   * The {{hero.name}} "[interpolation](displaying-data.html#interpolation)" 
 | |
|   displays the component's `hero.name` property value within the `<div>` tags.
 | |
|   
 | |
|   * The `[hero]` [property binding](template-syntax.html#property-binding) passes the `selectedHero` from
 | |
|   the parent `HeroListComponent` to the `hero` property of the child `HeroDetailComponent`.
 | |
|   
 | |
|   * The `(click)` [event binding](user-input.html#click) calls the Component's `selectHero` method when the user clicks
 | |
|   on a hero's name
 | |
| 
 | |
|   **Two-way data binding** is an important fourth form
 | |
|   that combines property and event binding in a single notation using the `ngModel` directive. 
 | |
|   We didn't have a two-way binding in the `HeroListComponent` template; 
 | |
|   here's an example from the `HeroDetailComponent` template (not shown):
 | |
| 
 | |
| +makeExample('architecture/ts/app/hero-detail.component.html', 'ngModel')(format=".")
 | |
| :marked
 | |
|   In two-way binding, a data property value flows to the input box from the component as with property binding.
 | |
|   The user's changes also flow back to the component, resetting the property to the latest value,
 | |
|   as with event binding.
 | |
|   
 | |
|   Angular processes *all* data bindings once per JavaScript event cycle, 
 | |
|   depth-first from the root of the application component tree. 
 | |
| figure
 | |
|   img(src="/resources/images/devguide/architecture/component-databinding.png" alt="Data Binding" style="float:left; width:300px; margin-left:-40px;margin-right:10px" )
 | |
| :marked
 | |
|   We don't know all the details yet
 | |
|   but it's clear from these examples that data binding plays an important role in communication 
 | |
|   between a template and its component ...
 | |
| <br clear="all">  
 | |
| figure
 | |
|   img(src="/resources/images/devguide/architecture/parent-child-binding.png" alt="Parent/Child binding" style="float:left; width:300px; margin-left:-40px;margin-right:10px" )
 | |
| :marked
 | |
|   ... ***and*** between parent and child components
 | |
| <br clear="all">
 | |
| 
 | |
| .l-main-section
 | |
| <a id="directive"></a>
 | |
| :marked
 | |
|   ## The Directive
 | |
| figure
 | |
|   img(src="/resources/images/devguide/architecture/directive.png" alt="Parent child" style="float:left; width:150px; margin-left:-40px;margin-right:10px" )
 | |
| :marked
 | |
|   Our Angular templates are *dynamic*. When Angular renders them, it transforms the DOM 
 | |
|   according to the instructions given by a **directive**.
 | |
|   
 | |
|   A directive is a class with directive metadata. In TypeScript we'd apply the `@Directive` decorator
 | |
|   to attach metadata to the class.
 | |
| <br clear="all">
 | |
| :marked
 | |
|   We already met one form of directive: the component. A component is a *directive-with-a-template*
 | |
|   and the `@Component` decorator is actually a `@Directive` decorator extended with template-oriented features.
 | |
| 
 | |
| .l-sub-section
 | |
|   :marked
 | |
|     While the **component is technically a directive**, 
 | |
|     it is so distinctive and central to Angular applications that we chose
 | |
|     to separate the component from the directive in our architectural overview.
 | |
| :marked
 | |
|   There are two *other* kinds of directives as well that we call "structural" and "attribute" directives.
 | |
|   
 | |
|   They tend to appear within an element tag like attributes, 
 | |
|   sometimes by name but more often as the target of an assignment or a binding.
 | |
|   
 | |
|   **Structural** directives alter layout by adding, removing, and replacing elements in DOM.
 | |
|   
 | |
|   We see two built-in structural directives at play in our [example](#template) template:
 | |
| +makeExample('architecture/ts/app/hero-list.component.1.html', 'structural')(format=".")
 | |
| :marked
 | |
|   * [`*ngFor`](displaying-data.html#ngFor) tells Angular to stamp out one `<div>` per hero in the `heroes` list.
 | |
|   * [`*ngIf`](displaying-data.html#ngIf) includes the `HeroDetail` component only if a selected hero exists.
 | |
|   
 | |
|   **Attribute** directives alter the appearance or behavior of an existing element. 
 | |
|   In templates they look like regular HTML attributes, hence the name.
 | |
|   
 | |
|   The `ngModel` directive, which implements two-way data binding, is an example of an attribute directive.
 | |
| +makeExample('architecture/ts/app/hero-detail.component.html', 'ngModel')(format=".")
 | |
| :marked
 | |
|   It modifies the behavior of an existing element (typically an `<input>`) 
 | |
|   by setting its display value property and responding to change events.
 | |
|   
 | |
|   Angular ships with a small number of other directives that either alter the layout structure 
 | |
|   (e.g. [ngSwitch](template-syntax.html#ngSwitch))
 | |
|   or modify aspects of DOM elements and components 
 | |
|   (e.g. [ngStyle](template-syntax.html#ngStyle) and [ngClass](template-syntax.html#ngClass)).
 | |
|   
 | |
|   And of course we can write our own directives.
 | |
| 
 | |
| .l-main-section
 | |
| <a id="service"></a>
 | |
| :marked
 | |
|   ## The Service
 | |
| figure
 | |
|   img(src="/resources/images/devguide/architecture/service.png" alt="Service" style="float:left; margin-left:-40px;margin-right:10px" )
 | |
| :marked
 | |
|   "Service" is a broad category encompassing any value, function or feature that our application needs.
 | |
|   
 | |
|   Almost anything can be a service. 
 | |
|   A service is typically a class with a narrow, well-defined purpose. It should do something specific and do it well.
 | |
| <br clear="all">
 | |
| :marked
 | |
|   Examples include:
 | |
|   * logging service
 | |
|   * data service
 | |
|   * message bus
 | |
|   * tax calculator
 | |
|   * application configuration
 | |
|   
 | |
|   There is nothing specifically *Angular* about services. Angular itself has no definition of a *service*. 
 | |
|   There is no *ServiceBase* class.
 | |
|   
 | |
|   Yet services are fundamental to any Angular application. 
 | |
|   
 | |
|   Here's an example of a service class that logs to the browser console
 | |
| +makeExample('architecture/ts/app/logger.service.ts', 'class', 'app/logger.service.ts (class only)')(format=".")
 | |
| :marked
 | |
|   Here's a `HeroService` that fetches heroes and returns them in a resolved [promise](http://www.html5rocks.com/en/tutorials/es6/promises/). 
 | |
|   The `HeroService` depends on the `LoggerService` and another `BackendService` that handles the server communication grunt work.
 | |
| +makeExample('architecture/ts/app/hero.service.ts', 'class', 'app/hero.service.ts (class only)')(format=".")
 | |
| :marked
 | |
|   Services are everywhere. 
 | |
| 
 | |
|   Our components are big consumers of services. They depend upon services to handle most chores. 
 | |
|   They don't fetch data from the server, they don't validate user input, they don't log directly to the console. 
 | |
|   They delegate such tasks to services.
 | |
|   
 | |
|   A component's job is to enable the user experience and nothing more. It mediates between the view (rendered by the template)
 | |
|   and the application logic (which often includes some notion of a "model").  A good component presents
 | |
|   properties and methods for data binding. It delegates everything non-trivial to services.
 | |
| 
 | |
|   Angular doesn't *enforce* these principles. 
 | |
|   It won't complain if we write a "kitchen sink" component with 3000 lines.
 | |
|   
 | |
|   Angular does help us *follow* these principles ... by making it easy to factor our
 | |
|   application logic into services and make those services available to components through *dependency injection*.
 | |
| 
 | |
| .l-main-section
 | |
| <a id="dependency-injection"></a>
 | |
| :marked
 | |
|   ## Dependency Injection
 | |
| figure
 | |
|   img(src="/resources/images/devguide/architecture/dependency-injection.png" alt="Service" style="float:left; width:200px; margin-left:-40px;margin-right:10px" )
 | |
| :marked
 | |
|   "Dependency Injection" is a way to supply a new instance of a class 
 | |
|   with the fully-formed dependencies it requires. Most dependencies are services.
 | |
|   Angular uses dependency injection to provide new components with the services they need.
 | |
| <br clear="all">
 | |
| :marked
 | |
|   In TypeScript, Angular can tell which services a component needs by looking at the types of its constructor parameters.
 | |
|   For example, the constructor of our `HeroListComponent` needs the `HeroService`:
 | |
| +makeExample('architecture/ts/app/hero-list.component.ts', 'ctor', 'app/hero-list.component (constructor)')(format=".")
 | |
| :marked
 | |
|   When Angular creates a component, it first asks an **Injector** for
 | |
|   the services that the component requires. 
 | |
|   
 | |
|   An `Injector` maintains a container of service instances that it has previously created.
 | |
|   If a requested service instance is not in the container, the injector makes one and adds it to the container
 | |
|   before returning the service to Angular. 
 | |
|   When all requested services have been resolved and returned, 
 | |
|   Angular can call the component's constructor with those services as arguments.
 | |
|   This is what we mean by *dependency injection*.
 | |
|   
 | |
|   The process of `HeroService` injection looks a bit like this:
 | |
| figure
 | |
|   img(src="/resources/images/devguide/architecture/injector-injects.png" alt="Service" )
 | |
| :marked
 | |
|   If the `Injector` doesn't have a `HeroService`, how does it know how to make one?
 | |
|   
 | |
|   In brief, we must have previously registered a **provider** of the `HeroService` with the `Injector`.
 | |
|   A provider is something that can create or return a service, typically  the service class itself.
 | |
|   
 | |
|   We can register providers at any level of the application component tree.
 | |
|   We often do so at the root when we bootstrap the application so that
 | |
|   the same instance of a service is available everywhere.
 | |
| +makeExample('architecture/ts/app/boot.ts', 'bootstrap','app/boot.ts (excerpt)')(format=".")
 | |
| :marked
 | |
|   Alternatively, we might register at a component level ...
 | |
| +makeExample('architecture/ts/app/hero-list.component.ts', 'providers','app/hero-list.component.ts (excerpt)')(format=".")
 | |
| :marked
 | |
|   ... in which case we get a new instance of the
 | |
|   service with each new instance of that component.
 | |
|   
 | |
|   We've vastly over-simplified dependency injection for this overview.
 | |
|   We can learn the full story in the [Dependency Injection](dependency-injection.html) chapter.
 | |
|   
 | |
|   The points to remember are:
 | |
|   * dependency injection is wired into the framework and used everywhere.<br><br>
 | |
|   * the `Injector` is the main mechanism.
 | |
|     * an injector maintains a *container* of service instances that it created.
 | |
|     * an injector can create a new service instance using a *provider*.
 | |
|   * a *provider* is a recipe for creating a service.
 | |
|  
 | |
|   * we register *providers* with injectors.
 | |
| 
 | |
| <a id="other-stuff"></a>  
 | |
| .l-main-section
 | |
| :marked
 | |
|   ## Wrap up
 | |
|   We've learned just a bit about the eight main building blocks of an Angular application
 | |
|   
 | |
|   1. [Module](#module)   
 | |
|   1. [Component](#component)
 | |
|   1. [Template](#template)
 | |
|   1. [Metadata](#metadata)
 | |
|   1. [Data Binding](#data-binding)
 | |
|   1. [Service](#service)
 | |
|   1. [Directive](#directive)
 | |
|   1. [Dependency Injection](#dependency-injection)
 | |
|   
 | |
|   That's a foundation for everything else in an Angular application
 | |
|   and it's more than enough to get going.
 | |
|   But it doesn't include everything we'll need or want to know.
 | |
|     
 | |
| <a id="other-stuff"></a>  
 | |
| .l-main-section
 | |
| :marked
 | |
|   ## The Other Stuff
 | |
|   
 | |
|   Here is a brief, alphabetical list of other important Angular features and services. 
 | |
|   Most of them are covered in this Developers Guide (or soon will be):
 | |
|   
 | |
|   >**Animations** - A forthcoming animation library makes it easy for developers to animate component behavior
 | |
|   without deep knowledge of animation techniques or css.
 | |
|     
 | |
|   >**Bootstrap** - A method to configure and launch the root application component.
 | |
|   
 | |
|   >**Change Detection** - Learn how Angular decides that a component property value has changed and 
 | |
|   when to update the screen. 
 | |
|   Learn how it uses **zones** to intercept asynchronous activity and run its change detection strategies. 
 | |
|   
 | |
|   >**[Component Router](router.html)** - With the Component Router service, users can navigate a multi-screen application 
 | |
|   in a familiar web browsing style using URLs.
 | |
|   
 | |
|   >**Events** - The DOM raises events. So can components and services. Angular offers mechanisms for
 | |
|   publishing and subscribing to events including an implementation of the [RxJS Observable](https://github.com/zenparsing/es-observable) proposal.
 | |
|   
 | |
|   >**[Forms](forms.html)** - Support complex data entry scenarios with HTML-based validation and dirty checking.
 | |
|   
 | |
|   >**HTTP** - Communicate with a server to get data, save data, and invoke server-side actions with this Angular HTTP client.
 | |
|   
 | |
|   >**[Lifecycle Hooks](lifecycle-hooks.html)** - We can tap into key moments in the lifetime of a component, from its creation to its destruction, 
 | |
|   by implementing the "Lifecycle Hook" interfaces.
 | |
|   
 | |
|   >**[Pipes](pipes.html)** - Services that transform values for display. 
 | |
|   We can put pipes in our templates to improve the user experience. For example,
 | |
|   this `currency` pipe expression,
 | |
| <div style="margin-left:40px">
 | |
| code-example(language="javascript" linenumbers=".").
 | |
|   price | currency:'USD':true
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| :marked
 | |
|   >displays a price of "42.33" as `$42.33`.
 | |
|   
 | |
|   >**[Testing](../testing/index.html)** - Angular provides a testing library for "unit testing" our application parts as they
 | |
|   interact with the Angular framework.
 |