Book Image

Learning Angular - Third Edition

By : Aristeidis Bampakos, Pablo Deeleman
Book Image

Learning Angular - Third Edition

By: Aristeidis Bampakos, Pablo Deeleman

Overview of this book

Angular, loved by millions of web developers around the world, continues to be one of the top JavaScript frameworks thanks to its regular updates and new features that enable fast, cross-platform, and secure frontend web development. With Angular, you can achieve high performance using the latest web techniques and extensive integration with web tools and integrated development environments (IDEs). Updated to Angular 10, this third edition of the Learning Angular book covers new features and modern web development practices to address the current frontend web development landscape. If you are new to Angular, this book will give you a comprehensive introduction to help you get you up and running in no time. You'll learn how to develop apps by harnessing the power of the Angular command-line interface (CLI), write unit tests, style your apps by following the Material Design guidelines, and finally deploy them to a hosting provider. The book is especially useful for beginners to get to grips with the bare bones of the framework needed to start developing Angular apps. By the end of this book, you’ll not only be able to create Angular applications with TypeScript from scratch but also enhance your coding skills with best practices.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
1
Section 1: Getting Started with Angular
4
Section 2: Components – the Basic Building Blocks of an Angular App
9
Section 3: User Experience and Testability
15
Section 4: Deployment and Practice

Introducing the Angular CDK

The Angular CDK is the core of the Angular Material library. It is a collection of tools that implement similar interaction patterns; however, they are not tied to any presentation style, such as Material Design. The behavior of Angular Material components has been designed using the Angular CDK. The Angular CDK is so abstract that you can use it to create custom components. You should seriously consider it if you are a UI library author.

The capabilities of the Angular CDK are enormous and certainly cannot fit in a single chapter. For the sake of demonstration, we are going to describe two elements of the library:

  • Clipboard: Provides a copy–paste functionality with the system clipboard
  • Drag and Drop: Provides drag-and-drop features in elements

Angular CDK elements are imported from the @angular/cdk npm package. Each element must be imported from its module, which resides in a different namespace, similar to the Angular Material...