56 lines
3.5 KiB
Markdown
56 lines
3.5 KiB
Markdown
# Next steps: tools and techniques
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After you understand the basic Angular building blocks, you can begin to learn more
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about the features and tools that are available to help you develop and deliver Angular applications.
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Here are some key features.
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## Responsive programming
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* [Lifecycle hooks](guide/lifecycle-hooks): Tap into key moments in the lifetime of a component, from its creation to its destruction, by implementing the lifecycle hook interfaces.
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* [Observables and event processing](guide/observables): How to use observables with components and services to publish and subscribe to messages of any type, such as user-interaction events and asynchronous operation results.
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## Client-server interaction
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* [HTTP](guide/http): Communicate with a server to get data, save data, and invoke server-side actions with an HTTP client.
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* [Server-side Rendering](guide/universal): Angular Universal generates static application pages on the server through server-side rendering (SSR). This allows you to run your Angular app on the server in order to improve performance and show the first page quickly on mobile and low-powered devices, and also facilitate web crawlers.
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* [Service Workers](guide/service-worker-intro): Use a service worker to reduce dependency on the network
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significantly improving the user experience.
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## Domain-specific libraries
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* [Animations](guide/animations): Use Angular's animation library to animate component behavior
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without deep knowledge of animation techniques or CSS.
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* [Forms](guide/forms): Support complex data entry scenarios with HTML-based validation and dirty checking.
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## Support for the development cycle
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* [Compilation](guide/aot-compiler): Angular provides just-in-time (JIT) compilation for the development environment, and ahead-of-time (AOT) compilation for the production environment.
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* [Testing platform](guide/testing): Run unit tests on your application parts as they interact with the Angular framework.
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* [Internationalization](guide/i18n): Make your app available in multiple languages with Angular's internationalization (i18n) tools.
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* [Security guidelines](guide/security): Learn about Angular's built-in protections against common web-app vulnerabilities and attacks such as cross-site scripting attacks.
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## Setup, build, and deployment configuration
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* [CLI Command Reference](cli): The Angular CLI is a command-line tool that you use to create projects, generate application and library code, and perform a variety of ongoing development tasks such as testing, bundling, and deployment.
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* [Workspace and File Structure](guide/file-structure): Understand the structure of Angular workspace and project folders.
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* [npm Packages](guide/npm-packages): The Angular Framework, Angular CLI, and components used by Angular applications are packaged as [npm](https://docs.npmjs.com/) packages and distributed via the npm registry. The Angular CLI creates a default `package.json` file, which specifies a starter set of packages that work well together and jointly support many common application scenarios.
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* [TypeScript configuration](guide/typescript-configuration): TypeScript is the primary language for Angular application development.
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* [Browser support](guide/browser-support): Make your apps compatible across a wide range of browsers.
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* [Building and Serving](guide/build): Learn to define different build and proxy server configurations for your project, such as development, staging, and production.
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* [Deployment](guide/deployment): Learn techniques for deploying your Angular application to a remote server.
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