Book Image

Angular UI Development with PrimeNG

By : Sudheer Jonna, Oleg Varaksin
Book Image

Angular UI Development with PrimeNG

By: Sudheer Jonna, Oleg Varaksin

Overview of this book

PrimeNG is a leading UI component library for Angular applications with 80+ rich UI components. PrimeNG was a huge success in the Angular world and very quickly. It is a rapidly evolving library that is aligned with the last Angular release. In comparison with competitors, PrimeNG was created with enterprise applications in mind. This book provides a head-start to help readers develop real–world, single-page applications using the popular development stack. This book consists of 10 chapters and starts with a short introduction to single-page applications. TypeScript and Angular fundamentals are important first steps for subsequent PrimeNG topics. Later we discuss how to set up and configure a PrimeNG application in different ways as a kick-start. Once the environment is ready then it is time to learn PrimeNG development, starting from theming concepts and responsive layouts. Readers will learn enhanced input, select, button components followed by the various panels, data iteration, overlays, messages and menu components. The validation of form elements will be covered too. An extra chapter demonstrates how to create map and chart components for real-world applications. Apart from built-in UI components and their features, the readers will learn how to customize components to meet their requirements. Miscellaneous use cases are discussed in a separate chapter, including: file uploading, drag and drop, blocking page pieces during AJAX calls, CRUD sample implementations, and more. This chapter goes beyond common topics, implements a custom component, and discusses a popular state management with @ngrx/store. The final chapter describes unit and end-to-end testing. To make sure Angular and PrimeNG development are flawless, we explain full-fledged testing frameworks with systematic examples. Tips for speeding up unit testing and debugging Angular applications end this book. The book is also focused on how to avoid some common pitfalls, and shows best practices with tips and tricks for efficient Angular and PrimeNG development. At the end of this book, the readers will know the ins and outs of how to use PrimeNG in Angular applications and will be ready to create real- world Angular applications using rich PrimeNG components.
Table of Contents (11 chapters)

Organizing your project structure with Sass

Every large frontend application needs a robust, scalable CSS architecture. A CSS preprocessor is indispensable--it helps to write cleaner, modular code with reusable pieces and maintain large and complex style sheets. A CSS preprocessor is basically a scripting language that extends CSS and compiles it into regular CSS. There are three primary CSS preprocessors today: Sass, LESS, and Stylus. As per Google Trends, Sass is the most used preprocessor today. Sass mimics the HTML structure and lets you nest CSS selectors that follow the same visual HTML hierarchy. With CSS, you would need to write this:

.container {
padding: 5px;
}

.container p {
margin: 5px;
}

With Sass, you can simply write this:

.container {
padding: 5px;
p {
margin: 5px;
}
}
Sass is backward compatible with CSS, so you can easily convert your existing CSS files just by renaming the .css file extension to .scss.

While nesting CSS selectors, you can use the handy & symbol...