Book Image

Modern JavaScript Applications

By : Narayan Prusty
Book Image

Modern JavaScript Applications

By: Narayan Prusty

Overview of this book

Over the years, JavaScript has become vital to the development of a wide range of applications with different architectures. But JS moves lightning fast, and it’s easy to fall behind. Modern JavaScript Applications is designed to get you exploring the latest features of JavaScript and how they can be applied to develop high-quality applications with different architectures. Begin by creating a single page application that builds on the innovative MVC approach using AngularJS, then move forward to develop an enterprise-level application with the microservices architecture using Node to build web services. After that, shift your focus to network programming concepts as you build a real-time web application with websockets. Learn to build responsive, declarative UIs with React and Bootstrap, and see how the performance of web applications can be enhanced using Functional Reactive Programming (FRP). Along the way, explore how the power of JavaScript can be increased multi-fold with high performance techniques. By the end of the book, you’ll be a skilled JavaScript developer with a solid knowledge of the latest JavaScript techniques, tools, and architecture to build modern web apps.
Table of Contents (21 chapters)
Modern JavaScript Applications
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

The difference between providers and the viewProviders property


The viewProviders property allows us to make providers available to the component's view only, whereas the providers property makes a provider available to its content children and view children.

The providers property creates a service instance only once and provides the same to whichever component asks for it. We have already seen how viewProviders works. Let's look at an example of how providers works. Place this code above the App component's code:

var counter = 1;

var Service5 = ng.core.Class({
  constructor: function(){}
})

var ServiceTest2 = ng.core.Component({
  selector: "st2",
  template: ""
}).Class({
  constructor: [Service5, function(s5){
    console.log(s5);
  }]
})

var ServiceTest3 = ng.core.Component({
  selector: "st3",
  providers: [ng.core.provide(Service5, {useFactory: function(){
    counter++;
    return counter;
  }})],
  directives: [ServiceTest2],
  template: "<st2></st2>"
}).Class({
  constructor...