121 lines
5.1 KiB
Plaintext
121 lines
5.1 KiB
Plaintext
include ../../../../_includes/_util-fns
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.l-main-section
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:markdown
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## Install Angular2
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There are four steps to create any Angular app:
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1. Create an entry point HTML file where users will start
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1. Load the Angular library at the top of the file
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1. Make a root component for your application
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1. Bootstrap Angular
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You can edit and test out your apps by serving local files with a web server. Follow the steps in the <a href="../quickstart.html">quickstart</a> to get Typescript setup.
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When you're serving local files, edit and save them and start a web server that serves files in that directory. If you have Python installed, you can run a basic HTTP server from the root of your code directory with:
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pre.prettyprint.lang-bash
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code python -m SimpleHTTPServer 8000
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.callout.is-helpful
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header Typescript vs ES5
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:markdown
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Although we work through the examples in TypeScript, you can also use
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regular ES5. Click the ES5 link in any code box to see the ES5 JavaScript
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version. Note that in ES5, you'd want to name your files `.js` rather than
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`.ts`.
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.l-main-section
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:markdown
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## Create an entry point
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Create an `index.html` file and add the Angular library tags and a `main.ts` file where
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you'll build your first component.
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In the `<body>`, add an element called `<my-app>` that will be the root of your
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application.
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The TypeScript setup includes System.js, a third-party open-source library that adds ES6 module loading functionality to browsers. This step isn't needed for the ES5 version.
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+makeTabs('gettingstarted', 'ts/index2.html,js/index.html', 'TypeScript, JavaScript')
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.callout.is-helpful
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header Don't use code.angularjs.org in a live app
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:markdown
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This example serves the Angular library from <a href="http://code.angularjs.org">code.angularjs.org</a>. This is
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fine for examples, but you'd want to serve it yourself or use a CDN for real deployment.
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.l-main-section
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:markdown
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## Set up the starting component
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In `main.ts`, create a class called `AppComponent`, configure it to bind to the
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`<my-app>` element in `index.html`, and call Angular's `bootstrap()` to kick
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it all off like this:
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+makeTabs("gettingstarted", "ts/main.ts, js/main2.js", "TypeScript, JavaScript")
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.callout.is-helpful
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header Annotations vs Decorators
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:markdown
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If you are transpiling using a tool that translates the `@` symbols to
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annotations (for example Traceur), you will need to import the annotation versions of
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Component and View. That can be easily achieved using
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`import {ComponentAnnotation as Component, ViewAnnotation as View}`.
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.l-main-section
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:markdown
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## Run it!
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Open `index.html` through your web server and you should see:
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figure.image-display
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img(src='/resources/images/examples/setup-example1.png' alt="Example of Todo App")
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.l-main-section
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:markdown
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## Explanations
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This basic Angular app contains the structure for any app you'll build.
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.l-sub-section
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:markdown
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### It's all a tree
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You can think of Angular apps as a tree of components. This root component we've been talking about acts as the top
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level container for the rest of your application. You've named this one `AppComponent`, but there's
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nothing special about the name and you can use whatever makes sense to you.
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The root component's job is to give a location in the `index.html` file where your application will
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render through its element, in this case `<my-app>`. There is also nothing special about this
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element name; you can pick it as you like.
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The root component loads the initial template for the application that will load other components to perform
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whatever functions your application needs - menu bars, views, forms, etc. We'll walk through examples of all of
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these in the following pages.
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.l-sub-section
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:markdown
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### @Component and @View annotations
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A component annotation describes details about the component. An annotation can be identified by its at-sign (`@`).
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The `@Component` annotation defines the HTML tag for the component by specifying the component's CSS selector.
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The `@View` annotation defines the HTML that represents the component. The component you wrote uses an inline template, but you can also have an external template. To use an external template, specify a <code>templateUrl</code> property and give it the path to the HTML file.
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.l-sub-section
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:markdown
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### import vs. window.angular
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The main difference between the ES5 and TypeScript versions is the loading of modules.
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**TypeScript**<br/>
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TypeScript supports ES6 module loading syntax. ES6 modules allow for modular loading of JavaScript code. Using ES6 modules you can cherry-pick only what you need for your app.
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**Javascript**<br/>
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In ES5 the script file creates an angular property on the window of the browser. This property contains every piece of Angular core, whether you need it or not.
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+makeTabs('gettingstarted', 'ts/main-import.ts', 'TypeScript')
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+makeExample('gettingstarted/js', 'main-bootstrap.js', 'JavaScript')
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