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			404 lines
		
	
	
		
			19 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Markdown
		
	
	
	
	
	
| # Attribute Directives
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| 
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| An **Attribute** directive changes the appearance or behavior of a DOM element.
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| 
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| Try the <live-example title="Attribute Directive example"></live-example>.
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| 
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| {@a directive-overview}
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| 
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| ## Directives overview
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| 
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| There are three kinds of directives in Angular:
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| 
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| 1. Components—directives with a template.
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| 1. Structural directives—change the DOM layout by adding and removing DOM elements.
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| 1. Attribute directives—change the appearance or behavior of an element, component, or another directive.
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| 
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| *Components* are the most common of the three directives.
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| You saw a component for the first time in the [QuickStart](guide/quickstart) guide.
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| 
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| *Structural Directives* change the structure of the view.
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| Two examples are [NgFor](guide/template-syntax#ngFor) and [NgIf](guide/template-syntax#ngIf).
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| Learn about them in the [Structural Directives](guide/structural-directives) guide.
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| 
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| *Attribute directives* are used as attributes of elements.
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| The built-in [NgStyle](guide/template-syntax#ngStyle) directive in the
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| [Template Syntax](guide/template-syntax) guide, for example,
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| can change several element styles at the same time.
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| 
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| ## Build a simple attribute directive
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| 
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| An attribute directive minimally requires building a controller class annotated with
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| `@Directive`, which specifies the selector that identifies
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| the attribute.
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| The controller class implements the desired directive behavior.
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| 
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| This page demonstrates building a simple _myHighlight_ attribute
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| directive to set an element's background color
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| when the user hovers over that element. You can apply it like this:
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| 
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| <code-example path="attribute-directives/src/app/app.component.1.html" linenums="false" title="src/app/app.component.html (applied)" region="applied"></code-example>
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| 
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| {@a write-directive}
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| 
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| ### Write the directive code
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| 
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| Follow the [setup](guide/setup) instructions for creating a new local project
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| named <code>attribute-directives</code>.
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| 
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| Create the following source file in the indicated folder:
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| 
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| <code-example path="attribute-directives/src/app/highlight.directive.1.ts" title="src/app/highlight.directive.ts"></code-example>
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| 
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| The `import` statement specifies symbols from the Angular `core`:
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| 
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| 1. `Directive` provides the functionality of the `@Directive` decorator.
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| 1. `ElementRef` [injects](guide/dependency-injection) into the directive's constructor
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| so the code can access the DOM element.
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| 1. `Input` allows data to flow from the binding expression into the directive.
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| 
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| Next, the `@Directive` decorator function contains the directive metadata in a configuration object
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| as an argument.
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| 
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| `@Directive` requires a CSS selector to identify
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| the HTML in the template that is associated with the directive.
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| The [CSS selector for an attribute](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/CSS/Attribute_selectors)
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| is the attribute name in square brackets.
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| Here, the directive's selector is `[myHighlight]`.
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| Angular locates all elements in the template that have an attribute named `myHighlight`.
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| 
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| <div class="l-sub-section">
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| 
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| ### Why not call it "highlight"?
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| 
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| Though *highlight* is a more concise name than *myHighlight* and would work,
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| a best practice is to prefix selector names to ensure
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| they don't conflict with standard HTML attributes.
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| This also reduces the risk of colliding with third-party directive names.
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| 
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| Make sure you do **not** prefix the `highlight` directive name with **`ng`** because
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| that prefix is reserved for Angular and using it could cause bugs that are difficult to diagnose.
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| For a simple demo, the short prefix, `my`, helps distinguish your custom directive.
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| 
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| </div>
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| 
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| 
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| After the `@Directive` metadata comes the directive's controller class,
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| called `HighlightDirective`, which contains the logic for the directive.
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| Exporting `HighlightDirective` makes it accessible to other components.
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| 
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| Angular creates a new instance of the directive's controller class for
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| each matching element, injecting an Angular `ElementRef`
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| into the constructor.
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| `ElementRef` is a service that grants direct access to the DOM element
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| through its `nativeElement` property.
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| 
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| {@a apply-directive}
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| 
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| ## Apply the attribute directive
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| 
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| To use the new `HighlightDirective`, create a template that
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| applies the directive as an attribute to a paragraph (`<p>`) element.
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| In Angular terms, the `<p>` element is the attribute **host**.
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| 
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| Put the template in its own <code>app.component.html</code>
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| file that looks like this:
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| 
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| <code-example path="attribute-directives/src/app/app.component.1.html" title="src/app/app.component.html"></code-example>
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| 
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| Now reference this template in the `AppComponent`:
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| 
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| <code-example path="attribute-directives/src/app/app.component.ts" title="src/app/app.component.ts"></code-example>
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| 
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| Next, add an `import` statement to fetch the `Highlight` directive and
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| add that class to the `declarations` NgModule metadata. This way Angular
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| recognizes the directive when it encounters `myHighlight` in the template.
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| 
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| <code-example path="attribute-directives/src/app/app.module.ts" title="src/app/app.module.ts"></code-example>
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| 
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| Now when the app runs, the `myHighlight` directive highlights the paragraph text.
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| 
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| <figure>
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|   <img src="generated/images/guide/attribute-directives/first-highlight.png" alt="First Highlight">
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| </figure>
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| 
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| <div class="l-sub-section">
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| 
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| <h3 class="no-toc">Your directive isn't working?</h3>
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| 
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| Did you remember to add the directive to the `declarations` attribute of `@NgModule`?
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| It is easy to forget!
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| Open the console in the browser tools and look for an error like this:
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| 
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| <code-example format="nocode">
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|   EXCEPTION: Template parse errors:
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|     Can't bind to 'myHighlight' since it isn't a known property of 'p'.
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| </code-example>
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| 
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| Angular detects that you're trying to bind to *something* but it can't find this directive
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| in the module's `declarations` array.
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| After specifying `HighlightDirective` in the `declarations` array,
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| Angular knows it can apply the directive to components declared in this module.
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| 
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| </div>
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| 
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| To summarize, Angular found the `myHighlight` attribute on the `<p>` element.
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| It created an instance of the `HighlightDirective` class and
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| injected a reference to the `<p>` element into the directive's constructor
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| which sets the `<p>` element's background style to yellow.
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| 
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| {@a respond-to-user}
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| 
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| ## Respond to user-initiated events
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| 
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| Currently, `myHighlight` simply sets an element color.
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| The directive could be more dynamic.
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| It could detect when the user mouses into or out of the element
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| and respond by setting or clearing the highlight color.
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| 
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| Begin by adding `HostListener` to the list of imported symbols;
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| add the `Input` symbol as well because you'll need it soon.
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| 
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| <code-example path="attribute-directives/src/app/highlight.directive.ts" linenums="false" title="src/app/highlight.directive.ts (imports)" region="imports"></code-example>
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| 
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| Then add two eventhandlers that respond when the mouse enters or leaves,
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| each adorned by the `HostListener` decorator.
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| 
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| <code-example path="attribute-directives/src/app/highlight.directive.2.ts" linenums="false" title="src/app/highlight.directive.ts (mouse-methods)" region="mouse-methods"></code-example>
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| 
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| The `@HostListener` decorator lets you subscribe to events of the DOM
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| element that hosts an attribute directive, the `<p>` in this case.
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| 
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| <div class="l-sub-section">
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| 
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| Of course you could reach into the DOM with standard JavaScript and and attach event listeners manually.
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| There are at least three problems with _that_ approach:
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| 
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| 1. You have to write the listeners correctly.
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| 1. The code must *detach* the listener when the directive is destroyed to avoid memory leaks.
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| 1. Talking to DOM API directly isn't a best practice.
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| 
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| </div>
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| 
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| The handlers delegate to a helper method that sets the color on the DOM element, `el`,
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| which you declare and initialize in the constructor.
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| 
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| <code-example path="attribute-directives/src/app/highlight.directive.2.ts" linenums="false" title="src/app/highlight.directive.ts (constructor)" region="ctor"></code-example>
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| 
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| Here's the updated directive in full:
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| 
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| <code-example path="attribute-directives/src/app/highlight.directive.2.ts" title="src/app/highlight.directive.ts"></code-example>
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| 
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| Run the app and confirm that the background color appears when
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| the mouse hovers over the `p` and disappears as it moves out.
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| 
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| <figure>
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|   <img src="generated/images/guide/attribute-directives/highlight-directive-anim.gif" alt="Second Highlight">
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| </figure>
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| 
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| {@a bindings}
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| 
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| ## Pass values into the directive with an _@Input_ data binding
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| 
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| Currently the highlight color is hard-coded _within_ the directive. That's inflexible.
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| In this section, you give the developer the power to set the highlight color while applying the directive.
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| 
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| Start by adding a `highlightColor` property to the directive class like this:
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| 
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| <code-example path="attribute-directives/src/app/highlight.directive.2.ts" linenums="false" title="src/app/highlight.directive.ts (highlightColor)" region="color"></code-example>
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| 
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| {@a input}
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| 
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| ### Binding to an _@Input_ property
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| 
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| Notice the `@Input` decorator. It adds metadata to the class that makes the directive's `highlightColor` property available for binding.
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| 
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| It's called an *input* property because data flows from the binding expression _into_ the directive.
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| Without that input metadata, Angular rejects the binding; see [below](guide/attribute-directives#why-input "Why add @Input?") for more about that.
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| 
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| Try it by adding the following directive binding variations to the `AppComponent` template:
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| 
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| <code-example path="attribute-directives/src/app/app.component.1.html" linenums="false" title="src/app/app.component.html (excerpt)" region="color-1"></code-example>
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| 
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| Add a `color` property to the `AppComponent`.
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| 
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| <code-example path="attribute-directives/src/app/app.component.1.ts" linenums="false" title="src/app/app.component.ts (class)" region="class"></code-example>
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| 
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| Let it control the highlight color with a property binding.
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| 
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| <code-example path="attribute-directives/src/app/app.component.1.html" linenums="false" title="src/app/app.component.html (excerpt)" region="color-2"></code-example>
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| 
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| That's good, but it would be nice to _simultaneously_ apply the directive and set the color _in the same attribute_ like this.
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| 
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| <code-example path="attribute-directives/src/app/app.component.html" linenums="false" title="src/app/app.component.html (color)" region="color"></code-example>
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| 
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| The `[myHighlight]` attribute binding both applies the highlighting directive to the `<p>` element
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| and sets the directive's highlight color with a property binding.
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| You're re-using the directive's attribute selector (`[myHighlight]`) to do both jobs.
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| That's a crisp, compact syntax.
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| 
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| You'll have to rename the directive's `highlightColor` property to `myHighlight` because that's now the color property binding name.
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| 
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| <code-example path="attribute-directives/src/app/highlight.directive.2.ts" linenums="false" title="src/app/highlight.directive.ts (renamed to match directive selector)" region="color-2"></code-example>
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| 
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| This is disagreeable. The word, `myHighlight`, is a terrible property name and it doesn't convey the property's intent.
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| 
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| {@a input-alias}
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| 
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| ### Bind to an _@Input_ alias
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| 
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| Fortunately you can name the directive property whatever you want _and_ **_alias it_** for binding purposes.
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| 
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| Restore the original property name and specify the selector as the alias in the argument to `@Input`.
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| 
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| <code-example path="attribute-directives/src/app/highlight.directive.ts" linenums="false" title="src/app/highlight.directive.ts (color property with alias)" region="color"></code-example>
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| 
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| _Inside_ the directive the property is known as `highlightColor`.
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| _Outside_ the directive, where you bind to it, it's known as `myHighlight`.
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| 
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| You get the best of both worlds: the property name you want and the binding syntax you want:
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| 
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| <code-example path="attribute-directives/src/app/app.component.html" linenums="false" title="src/app/app.component.html (color)" region="color"></code-example>
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| 
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| Now that you're binding to `highlightColor`, modify the `onMouseEnter()` method to use it.
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| If someone neglects to bind to `highlightColor`, highlight in red:
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| 
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| <code-example path="attribute-directives/src/app/highlight.directive.3.ts" linenums="false" title="src/app/highlight.directive.ts (mouse enter)" region="mouse-enter"></code-example>
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| 
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| Here's the latest version of the directive class.
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| 
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| <code-example path="attribute-directives/src/app/highlight.directive.3.ts" linenums="false" title="src/app/highlight.directive.ts (excerpt)"></code-example>
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| 
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| ## Write a harness to try it
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| 
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| It may be difficult to imagine how this directive actually works.
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| In this section, you'll turn `AppComponent` into a harness that
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| lets you pick the highlight color with a radio button and bind your color choice to the directive.
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| 
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| Update <code>app.component.html</code> as follows:
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| 
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| <code-example path="attribute-directives/src/app/app.component.html" linenums="false" title="src/app/app.component.html (v2)" region="v2"></code-example>
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| 
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| Revise the `AppComponent.color` so that it has no initial value.
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| 
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| <code-example path="attribute-directives/src/app/app.component.ts" linenums="false" title="src/app/app.component.ts (class)" region="class"></code-example>
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| 
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| Here are the harness and directive in action.
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| 
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| <figure>
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|   <img src="generated/images/guide/attribute-directives/highlight-directive-v2-anim.gif" alt="Highlight v.2">
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| </figure>
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| 
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| {@a second-property}
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| 
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| ## Bind to a second property
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| 
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| This highlight directive has a single customizable property. In a real app, it may need more.
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| 
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| At the moment, the default color—the color that prevails until
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| the user picks a highlight color—is hard-coded as "red".
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| Let the template developer set the default color.
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| 
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| Add a second **input** property to `HighlightDirective` called `defaultColor`:
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| 
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| <code-example path="attribute-directives/src/app/highlight.directive.ts" linenums="false" title="src/app/highlight.directive.ts (defaultColor)" region="defaultColor"></code-example>
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| 
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| Revise the directive's `onMouseEnter` so that it first tries to highlight with the `highlightColor`,
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| then with the `defaultColor`, and falls back to "red" if both properties are undefined.
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| 
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| <code-example path="attribute-directives/src/app/highlight.directive.ts" linenums="false" title="src/app/highlight.directive.ts (mouse-enter)" region="mouse-enter"></code-example>
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| 
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| How do you bind to a second property when you're already binding to the `myHighlight` attribute name?
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| 
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| As with components, you can add as many directive property bindings as you need by stringing them along in the template.
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| The developer should be able to write the following template HTML to both bind to the `AppComponent.color`
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| and fall back to "violet" as the default color.
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| 
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| <code-example path="attribute-directives/src/app/app.component.html" linenums="false" title="src/app/app.component.html (defaultColor)" region="defaultColor"></code-example>
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| 
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| Angular knows that the `defaultColor` binding belongs to the `HighlightDirective`
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| because you made it _public_ with the `@Input` decorator.
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| 
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| Here's how the harness should work when you're done coding.
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| 
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| <figure>
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|   <img src="generated/images/guide/attribute-directives/highlight-directive-final-anim.gif" alt="Final Highlight">
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| </figure>
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| 
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| ## Summary
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| 
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| This page covered how to:
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| 
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| * [Build an **attribute directive**](guide/attribute-directives#write-directive) that modifies the behavior of an element.
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| * [Apply the directive](guide/attribute-directives#apply-directive) to an element in a template.
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| * [Respond to **events**](guide/attribute-directives#respond-to-user) that change the directive's behavior.
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| * [**Bind** values to the directive](guide/attribute-directives#bindings).
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| 
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| The final source code follows:
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| 
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| <code-tabs>
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|   <code-pane title="app/app.component.ts" path="attribute-directives/src/app/app.component.ts"></code-pane>
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|   <code-pane title="app/app.component.html" path="attribute-directives/src/app/app.component.html"></code-pane>
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|   <code-pane title="app/highlight.directive.ts" path="attribute-directives/src/app/highlight.directive.ts"></code-pane>
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|   <code-pane title="app/app.module.ts" path="attribute-directives/src/app/app.module.ts"></code-pane>
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|   <code-pane title="main.ts" path="attribute-directives/src/main.ts"></code-pane>
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|   <code-pane title="index.html" path="attribute-directives/src/index.html"></code-pane>
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| </code-tabs>
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| 
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| 
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| 
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| You can also experience and download the <live-example title="Attribute Directive example"></live-example>.
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| 
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| {@a why-input}
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| 
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| ### Appendix: Why add _@Input_?
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| 
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| In this demo, the `hightlightColor` property is an ***input*** property of
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| the `HighlightDirective`. You've seen it applied without an alias:
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| 
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| <code-example path="attribute-directives/src/app/highlight.directive.2.ts" linenums="false" title="src/app/highlight.directive.ts (color)" region="color"></code-example>
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| 
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| You've seen it with an alias:
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| 
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| <code-example path="attribute-directives/src/app/highlight.directive.ts" linenums="false" title="src/app/highlight.directive.ts (color)" region="color"></code-example>
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| 
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| Either way, the `@Input` decorator tells Angular that this property is
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| _public_ and available for binding by a parent component.
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| Without  `@Input`, Angular refuses to bind to the property.
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| 
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| You've bound template HTML to component properties before and never used `@Input`.
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| What's different?
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| 
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| The difference is a matter of trust.
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| Angular treats a component's template as _belonging_ to the component.
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| The component and its template trust each other implicitly.
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| Therefore, the component's own template may bind to _any_ property of that component,
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| with or without the `@Input` decorator.
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| 
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| But a component or directive shouldn't blindly trust _other_ components and directives.
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| The properties of a component or directive are hidden from binding by default.
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| They are _private_ from an Angular binding perspective.
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| When adorned with the `@Input` decorator, the property becomes _public_ from an Angular binding perspective.
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| Only then can it be bound by some other component or directive.
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| 
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| You can tell if `@Input` is needed by the position of the property name in a binding.
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| 
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| * When it appears in the template expression to the ***right*** of the equals (=),
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|   it belongs to the template's component and does not require the `@Input` decorator.
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| 
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| * When it appears in **square brackets** ([ ]) to the **left** of the equals (=),
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|   the property belongs to some _other_ component or directive;
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|   that property must be adorned with the `@Input` decorator.
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| 
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| Now apply that reasoning to the following example:
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| 
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| <code-example path="attribute-directives/src/app/app.component.html" linenums="false" title="src/app/app.component.html (color)" region="color"></code-example>
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| 
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| * The `color` property in the expression on the right belongs to the template's component.
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|   The template and its component trust each other.
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|   The `color` property doesn't require the `@Input` decorator.
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| 
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| * The `myHighlight` property on the left refers to an _aliased_ property of the `HighlightDirective`,
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|   not a property of the template's component. There are trust issues.
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|   Therefore, the directive property must carry the `@Input` decorator.
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