73 lines
3.5 KiB
Markdown
73 lines
3.5 KiB
Markdown
# Template statements
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Template statements are methods or properties that you can use in your HTML to respond to user events.
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With template statements, your application can engage users through actions such as displaying dynamic content or submitting forms.
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<div class="alert is-helpful">
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See the <live-example name="template-syntax">Template syntax</live-example> for
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the syntax and code snippets in this guide.
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</div>
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In the following example, the template statement `deleteHero()` appears in quotes to the right of the `=` symbol as in `(event)="statement"`.
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<code-example path="template-syntax/src/app/app.component.html" region="context-component-statement" header="src/app/app.component.html"></code-example>
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When the user clicks the **Delete hero** button, Angular calls the `deleteHero()` method in the component class.
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You can use template statements with elements, components, or directives in response to events.
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<div class="alert is-helpful">
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Responding to events is an aspect of Angular's [unidirectional data flow](guide/glossary#unidirectional-data-flow).
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You can change anything in your application during a single event loop.
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</div>
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## Syntax
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Like [template expressions](guide/interpolation), template statements use a language that looks like JavaScript.
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However, the parser for template statements differs from the parser for template expressions.
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In addition, the template statements parser specifically supports both basic assignment, `=`, and chaining expressions with semicolons, `;`.
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The following JavaScript and template expression syntax is not allowed:
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* `new`
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* increment and decrement operators, `++` and `--`
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* operator assignment, such as `+=` and `-=`
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* the bitwise operators, such as `|` and `&`
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* the [pipe operator](guide/pipes)
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## Statement context
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Statements have a context—a particular part of the application to which the statement belongs.
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Statements can refer only to what's in the statement context, which is typically the component instance.
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For example, `deleteHero()` of `(click)="deleteHero()"` is a method of the component in the following snippet.
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<code-example path="template-syntax/src/app/app.component.html" region="context-component-statement" header="src/app/app.component.html"></code-example>
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The statement context may also refer to properties of the template's own context.
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In the following example, the component's event handling method, `onSave()` takes the template's own `$event` object as an argument.
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On the next two lines, the `deleteHero()` method takes a [template input variable](guide/structural-directives#shorthand), `hero`, and `onSubmit()` takes a [template reference variable](guide/template-reference-variables), `#heroForm`.
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<code-example path="template-syntax/src/app/app.component.html" region="context-var-statement" header="src/app/app.component.html"></code-example>
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In this example, the context of the `$event` object, `hero`, and `#heroForm` is the template.
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Template context names take precedence over component context names.
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In the preceding `deleteHero(hero)`, the `hero` is the template input variable, not the component's `hero` property.
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## Statement best practices
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* **Conciseness**
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Keep template statements minimal by using method calls or basic property assignments.
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* **Work within the context**
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The context of a template statement can be the component class instance or the template.
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Because of this, template statements cannot refer to anything in the global namespace such as `window` or `document`.
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For example, template statements can't call `console.log()` or `Math.max()`.
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