Book Image

Learning Angular for .NET Developers

By : Rajesh Gunasundaram
Book Image

Learning Angular for .NET Developers

By: Rajesh Gunasundaram

Overview of this book

Are you are looking for a better, more efficient, and more powerful way of building front-end web applications? Well, look no further, you have come to the right place! This book comprehensively integrates Angular version 4 into your tool belt, then runs you through all the new options you now have on hand for your web apps without bogging you down. The frameworks, tools, and libraries mentioned here will make your work productive and minimize the friction usually associated with building server-side web applications. Starting off with building blocks of Angular version 4, we gradually move into integrating TypeScript and ES6. You will get confident in building single page applications and using Angular for prototyping components. You will then move on to building web services and full-stack web application using ASP.NET WebAPI. Finally, you will learn the development process focused on rapid delivery and testability for all application layers.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
Title Page
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface

Classes


A class is an extensible template that is used to create objects with member variables to hold the state of the object and member functions that deal with the behavior of the object.

The current version of JavaScript supports only function-based and prototype-based inheritance to build reusable components. The next version of JavaScript ECMAScript 6 supports object-oriented programming by adding the syntactic sugar for prototype-based class definitions and inheritance. However, TypeScript enabled developers to write code using object-oriented programming techniques, and it compiles the code down to JavaScript, which is compatible with all browsers and platforms:

class Customer { 
    name: string; 
    constructor(name: string) { 
        this.name = name; 
    } 
    logCustomer() { 
        console.log('customer name is ' + this.name); 
    } 
}  
let customer = new Customer("Rajesh Gunasundaram"); 

This Customer class has three members: a name property, a constructor, and a logCustomer...