angular-docs-cn/aio/content/tutorial/toh-pt2.md

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# Display a selection list
In this page, you'll expand the Tour of Heroes application to display a list of heroes, and
allow users to select a hero and display the hero's details.
<div class="alert is-helpful">
For the sample application that this page describes, see the <live-example></live-example>.
</div>
## Create mock heroes
You'll need some heroes to display.
Eventually you'll get them from a remote data server.
For now, you'll create some _mock heroes_ and pretend they came from the server.
Create a file called `mock-heroes.ts` in the `src/app/` folder.
Define a `HEROES` constant as an array of ten heroes and export it.
The file should look like this.
<code-example path="toh-pt2/src/app/mock-heroes.ts" header="src/app/mock-heroes.ts"></code-example>
## Displaying heroes
Open the `HeroesComponent` class file and import the mock `HEROES`.
<code-example path="toh-pt2/src/app/heroes/heroes.component.ts" region="import-heroes" header="src/app/heroes/heroes.component.ts (import HEROES)">
</code-example>
In the same file (`HeroesComponent` class), define a component property called `heroes` to expose the `HEROES` array for binding.
<code-example path="toh-pt2/src/app/heroes/heroes.component.ts" header="src/app/heroes/heroes.component.ts" region="component">
</code-example>
### List heroes with `*ngFor`
Open the `HeroesComponent` template file and make the following changes:
* Add an `<h2>` at the top,
* Below it add an HTML unordered list (`<ul>`)
* Insert an `<li>` within the `<ul>` that displays properties of a `hero`.
* Sprinkle some CSS classes for styling (you'll add the CSS styles shortly).
Make it look like this:
<code-example path="toh-pt2/src/app/heroes/heroes.component.1.html" region="list" header="heroes.component.html (heroes template)"></code-example>
That shows one hero. To list them all, add an `*ngFor` to the `<li>` to iterate through the list of heroes:
<code-example path="toh-pt2/src/app/heroes/heroes.component.1.html" region="li">
</code-example>
The [`*ngFor`](guide/built-in-directives#ngFor) is Angular's _repeater_ directive.
It repeats the host element for each element in a list.
The syntax in this example is as follows:
* `<li>` is the host element.
* `heroes` holds the mock heroes list from the `HeroesComponent` class, the mock heroes list.
* `hero` holds the current hero object for each iteration through the list.
<div class="alert is-important">
Don't forget the asterisk (*) in front of `ngFor`. It's a critical part of the syntax.
</div>
After the browser refreshes, the list of heroes appears.
{@a styles}
### Style the heroes
The heroes list should be attractive and should respond visually when users
hover over and select a hero from the list.
In the [first tutorial](tutorial/toh-pt0#app-wide-styles), you set the basic styles for the entire application in `styles.css`.
That stylesheet didn't include styles for this list of heroes.
You could add more styles to `styles.css` and keep growing that stylesheet as you add components.
You may prefer instead to define private styles for a specific component and keep everything a component needs&mdash; the code, the HTML,
and the CSS &mdash;together in one place.
This approach makes it easier to re-use the component somewhere else
and deliver the component's intended appearance even if the global styles are different.
You define private styles either inline in the `@Component.styles` array or
as stylesheet file(s) identified in the `@Component.styleUrls` array.
When the CLI generated the `HeroesComponent`, it created an empty `heroes.component.css` stylesheet for the `HeroesComponent`
and pointed to it in `@Component.styleUrls` like this.
<code-example path="toh-pt2/src/app/heroes/heroes.component.ts" region="metadata"
header="src/app/heroes/heroes.component.ts (@Component)">
</code-example>
Open the `heroes.component.css` file and paste in the private CSS styles for the `HeroesComponent`.
You'll find them in the [final code review](#final-code-review) at the bottom of this guide.
<div class="alert is-important">
Styles and stylesheets identified in `@Component` metadata are scoped to that specific component.
The `heroes.component.css` styles apply only to the `HeroesComponent` and don't affect the outer HTML or the HTML in any other component.
</div>
## Viewing details
When the user clicks a hero in the list, the component should display the selected hero's details at the bottom of the page.
In this section, you'll listen for the hero item click event
and update the hero detail.
### Add a click event binding
Add a click event binding to the `<li>` like this:
<code-example path="toh-pt2/src/app/heroes/heroes.component.1.html" region="selectedHero-click" header="heroes.component.html (template excerpt)"></code-example>
This is an example of Angular's [event binding](guide/event-binding) syntax.
The parentheses around `click` tell Angular to listen for the `<li>` element's `click` event.
When the user clicks in the `<li>`, Angular executes the `onSelect(hero)` expression.
In the next section, define an `onSelect()` method in `HeroesComponent` to
display the hero that was defined in the `*ngFor` expression.
### Add the click event handler
Rename the component's `hero` property to `selectedHero` but don't assign it.
There is no _selected hero_ when the application starts.
Add the following `onSelect()` method, which assigns the clicked hero from the template
to the component's `selectedHero`.
<code-example path="toh-pt2/src/app/heroes/heroes.component.ts" region="on-select" header="src/app/heroes/heroes.component.ts (onSelect)"></code-example>
### Add a details section
Currently, you have a list in the component template. To click on a hero on the list
and reveal details about that hero, you need a section for the details to render in the
template. Add the following to `heroes.component.html` beneath the list section:
<code-example path="toh-pt2/src/app/heroes/heroes.component.html" region="selectedHero-details" header="heroes.component.html (selected hero details)"></code-example>
After the browser refreshes, the application is broken.
Open the browser developer tools and look in the console for an error message like this:
<code-example language="sh" class="code-shell">
HeroesComponent.html:3 ERROR TypeError: Cannot read property 'name' of undefined
</code-example>
#### What happened?
When the application starts, the `selectedHero` is `undefined` _by design_.
Binding expressions in the template that refer to properties of `selectedHero`&mdash;expressions like `{{selectedHero.name}}`&mdash;_must fail_ because there is no selected hero.
#### The fix - hide empty details with _*ngIf_
The component should only display the selected hero details if the `selectedHero` exists.
Wrap the hero detail HTML in a `<div>`.
Add Angular's `*ngIf` directive to the `<div>` and set it to `selectedHero`.
<div class="alert is-important">
Don't forget the asterisk (*) in front of `ngIf`. It's a critical part of the syntax.
</div>
<code-example path="toh-pt2/src/app/heroes/heroes.component.html" region="ng-if" header="src/app/heroes/heroes.component.html (*ngIf)"></code-example>
After the browser refreshes, the list of names reappears.
The details area is blank.
Click a hero in the list of heroes and its details appear.
The application seems to be working again.
The heroes appear in a list and details about the clicked hero appear at the bottom of the page.
#### Why it works
When `selectedHero` is undefined, the `ngIf` removes the hero detail from the DOM. There are no `selectedHero` bindings to consider.
When the user picks a hero, `selectedHero` has a value and
`ngIf` puts the hero detail into the DOM.
### Style the selected hero
To help identify the selected hero, you can use the `.selected` CSS class in the [styles you added earlier](#styles).
To apply the `.selected` class to the `<li>` when the user clicks it, use class binding.
<div class="lightbox">
<img src='generated/images/guide/toh/heroes-list-selected.png' alt="Selected hero with dark background and light text that differentiates it from unselected list items">
</div>
Angular's [class binding](guide/attribute-binding#class-binding) can add and remove a CSS class conditionally.
Just add `[class.some-css-class]="some-condition"` to the element you want to style.
Add the following `[class.selected]` binding to the `<li>` in the `HeroesComponent` template:
<code-example path="toh-pt2/src/app/heroes/heroes.component.1.html" region="class-selected" header="heroes.component.html (toggle the 'selected' CSS class)"></code-example>
When the current row hero is the same as the `selectedHero`, Angular adds the `selected` CSS class. When the two heroes are different, Angular removes the class.
The finished `<li>` looks like this:
<code-example path="toh-pt2/src/app/heroes/heroes.component.html" region="li" header="heroes.component.html (list item hero)"></code-example>
{@a final-code-review}
## Final code review
Here are the code files discussed on this page, including the `HeroesComponent` styles.
<code-tabs>
<code-pane header="src/app/mock-heroes.ts" path="toh-pt2/src/app/mock-heroes.ts">
</code-pane>
<code-pane header="src/app/heroes/heroes.component.ts" path="toh-pt2/src/app/heroes/heroes.component.ts">
</code-pane>
<code-pane header="src/app/heroes/heroes.component.html" path="toh-pt2/src/app/heroes/heroes.component.html">
</code-pane>
<code-pane header="src/app/heroes/heroes.component.css" path="toh-pt2/src/app/heroes/heroes.component.css">
</code-pane>
</code-tabs>
## Summary
* The Tour of Heroes application displays a list of heroes with a detail view.
* The user can select a hero and see that hero's details.
* You used `*ngFor` to display a list.
* You used `*ngIf` to conditionally include or exclude a block of HTML.
* You can toggle a CSS style class with a `class` binding.