Book Image

Angular Projects

By : Zama Khan Mohammed
Book Image

Angular Projects

By: Zama Khan Mohammed

Overview of this book

<p>Angular is one of the best frameworks, not only for building web applications, but also for building applications on other platforms such as desktop and mobile. It is packed with amazing web tools that allow developers to become more productive and make the development experience a happier one </p><p>This book will be your practical guide when it comes to building optimized web apps using Angular. The book explores a number of popular features, including the experimental Ivy rendered, lazy loading, and differential loading, among others, in the projects. It starts with the basics of Angular and its tools, which will help you to develop and debug Angular applications. You will learn how to create an SPA using Angular Router, and optimize it by code splitting and Preloading Routes. We will then build a form-heavy application and make forms reactive by using Reactive Forms. After that, we will learn how to build a Progressive Web App, and a server-side rendering app, as well as a MonoRepo app. Furthermore, we will also dive into building mobile apps using Ionic and NativeScript. Finally, we end the book by creating a component library for our application using Angular CDK and then testing it. </p><p>By the end of this book, you’ll have gained comprehensive insights into using Angular, along with hands-on experience in creating intuitive real-world applications.</p>
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
Title Page
Copyright and Credits
Dedication
Foreword

Summary

In this chapter, we have created an inventory app, used one of the component libraries that we created using Angular, looked at Clarity components, and used reactive forms to create complex forms. We also added some built-in and custom validations. By doing this, we learned how to use Clarity components in our Angular application, as well as some of its more complex components, such as wizard and Datagrid. We also learned how reactive forms can be created.

You should now be able to create complex forms using FormArray, FormGroup, and FormControl and also be able to add custom validations to any web form. Learning how we can use bundle analyzers to optimize our bundles helped with this.

In the next chapter, we will create a simple e-commerce application that we will convert into a Progressive Web App. We will be able to use this as a standalone app on any...