AngularJS Javascript framework for superheroes
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Back in time...... when the dinosaurs rule the Earth
Websites instead of webapps
Client seen as a dumb interface
All the workload handled by the server
No clientside logic
Javascript coders seen as web designers
Getting into present days...
AJAX HTML5 CSS3
Web 2.0
Client splitted from server
Lots of new Javascript libraries
Web application
Javascript: the answer!
Javascript framework
MVC Architecture
Big web apps
A current problem
Too much time
Too much code
Too much stress
Building clientside webapp is still hard
DOM Manipulation
Data validation
Angular for the win!Databinding
Basic templating directives
Form validation
Routing
Reusable components
Dependency injection
Unittesting
BootstrappingLoad HTML DOM
Load the module associated with the directive
Create the application injector
Compile the DOM treating the ngapp directive as the root of the compilation
Conceptual Overview1. The browser loads the HTML and parses it into a DOM
2. The browser loads angular.js script
3. Angular waits for DOMContentLoaded event
4. Angular looks for ngapp directive, which designates the application boundary
5. The Module specified in ngapp (if any) is used to configure the $injector
6. The $injector is used to create the $compile service as well as $rootScope
7. The $compile service is used to compile the DOM and link it with $rootScope
HTML CompilerCompiler is an angular service which traverses the DOM looking for attributes
Compile: traverse the DOM and collect all of the directives. The result is a linking function
Link: combine the directives with a scope and produce a live view. Any changes in the scope model are reflected in theview, and any user interactions with the view are reflected in the scope model. This makes the scope model the single
source of truth
Conceptual OverviewAlso knows as Model View View Model (MVVM)
Scope & ViewThe scope is responsible for detecting changes to the model section and provides the execution
context for expressions
The browser parses the HTML into the DOM, and the DOMbecomes the input to the template engine known as thecompiler. The compiler looks for directives which in turn setup watches on the model. The result is a continuouslyupdating view which does not need template model remerging. Your model becomes the single sourceoftruth foryour view.
Example Code
<input type="text" ng-model="yourName" placeholder="Enter a name here"><h1>Hello {{yourName}}!</h1>
Enter a name here
Hello !
DirectivesA directive is a behavior or DOM transformation which is triggered by the presence of a customattribute, element name, or a class name. A directive allows you to extend the HTML vocabulary
in a declarative fashion
Directives Example
angular.module('Presentation', []) .controller('DirectiveController', ['$scope', function ($scope) { $scope.customer = { name: 'Naomi', address: '1600 Amphitheatre' }; }]) .directive('myCustomer', function () { return { template: '<b>Name</b>: {{customer.name}} <b>Address</b>: {{customer.address}}' }; }); // HTML<div ng-controller="DirectiveController"> <div my-customer></div></div>
Name: Naomi Address: 1600 Amphitheatre
FiltersFilters perform data transformation. Typically they are used in conjunction with the locale toformat the data in locale specific output. They follow the spirit of UNIX filters and use similar
syntax | (pipe)
Filters Example
<div>Formatted number: {{val | number:2}}</div><div>Your name (in lowercase): {{user.name | lowercase}}</div>
Formatted number:
Enter a name here
Your name (in lowercase):
ClientSide Routing$route is used for deeplinking URLs to controllers and views (HTML partials).
It watches $location.url() and tries to map the path to an existing route definition. You candefine routes through $routeProvider's API.
The $route service is typically used in conjunction with the ngView directive and the$routeParams service.
Routing Example
angular.module('MyApp', ['ngRoute']) .config(['$routeProvider', function ($routeProvider) { $routeProvider .when('/user/:id', { templateUrl: 'views/user.html', controller: 'UserController' }); }) .controller('UserController', ['$scope', '$route', function ($scope, $route) { $scope.userId = $route.current.params.id; });
ServicesAngular services are substitutable objects that are wired together using dependency injection(DI). You can use services to organize and share code across your app.
Angular services are:
Lazily instantiated: Angular only instantiates a service when an application component dependson it
Singletons: Each component dependent on a service gets a reference to the single instancegenerated by the service factory
Angular offers several useful services (like $http), but for most applications you'll also want tocreate your own.
Services Example
angular.module('Presentation', []) .service('notify', ['$window', function (window) { var msgs = []; return function (msg) { msgs.push(msg); if (msgs.length > 2) { window.alert(msgs); msgs = []; } }; }) .controller('ServiceController', ['$scope', 'notify', function ($scope, notify) { $scope.notify = notify; }); // HTML<div ng-controller="ServiceController"> <input type="text" ng-init="message='Developers'" ng-model="message"/> <button ng-click="notify(message)") Notify</button></div>
Developers Notify
FormForm is simply a group of controls. Angular gives state to each of them, such as pristine, dirty, valid, invalid
Angular form creates an instance of FormController. FormController itself has methods and properties:
formName.$pristine: TRUE if the user has not interacted with the form yet
formName.$dirty: TRUE if the user has already interacted with the form.
formName.$valid: TRUE if all containing form and controls are valid
formName.$invalid: TRUE if at least one containing form and control is invalid.
formName.$error: Is an object hash, containing references to all invalid controls or forms
Form StatesIt is important to understand flow of the form states in order to use angular form properly. This flow gives you visualizationof the form state from the very first time the form is rendered until the user has finished filling the form
Flow 1: pristine and invalid When the form is first rendered and the user has not interacted with the form yet.
Flow 2: dirty and invalid User has interacted with the form, but validity has not been satisfied, yet
Flow 3: dirty and valid User has finished filling the form and all the validation rule has been satisfied
Form Example (HTML)
<div ng-controller="FormController"> <form name="form" class="css-form" novalidate> Name: <input type="text" ng-model="user.name" name="uName" required/> <br/>E-mail: <input type="email" ng-model="user.email" name="uEmail" required/> <br/> <div ng-show="form.uEmail.$dirty && form.uEmail.$invalid">Invalid: <span ng-show="form.uEmail.$error.required"> Tell us your email. </span> <span ng-show="form.uEmail.$error.email"> This is not a valid email. </span> </div> <input type="checkbox" ng-model="user.agree" name="userAgree" required/> I agree<br/> <div ng-show="!user.agree"> Please agree. </div> <button ng-click="reset()" ng-disabled="isUnchanged(user)"> RESET </button> <button ng-click="update(user)" ng-disabled="form.$invalid || isUnchanged(user)"> SAVE </button>
</form>
Form Example (Javascript)
function FormController ($scope) { $scope.master = {}; $scope.update = function (user) { $scope.master = angular.copy(user); }; $scope.reset = function () { $scope.user = angular.copy($scope.master); }; $scope.isUnchanged = function (user) { return angular.equals(user, $scope.master); }; $scope.reset();}
Form Live ExampleName: Email:
I agreePlease agree.RESET SAVE
Unit TestingUnit testing as the name implies is about testing individual units of code. What makes eachapplication unique is its logic, and the logic is what we would like to test. If the logic for yourapplication contains DOM manipulation, it will be hard to test. In angular the controllers are
strictly separated from the DOM manipulation logic and this results in a much easier testabilitystory.
AngularJS uses Jasmine as unit testing and E2E framework
Unit testing example
function PasswordCtrl ($scope) { $scope.password = ''; $scope.grade = function () { var size = $scope.password.length; if (size > 8) { $scope.strength = 'strong'; } else if (size > 3) { $scope.strength = 'medium'; } else { $scope.strength = 'weak'; } };}
var $scope = {};var pc = $controller('PasswordCtrl', {$scope: $scope});$scope.password = 'abc';$scope.grade();expect($scope.strength).toEqual('weak');
E2E testing exampleIt's quite easy to test services, directives, filters, controllers, etc with AngularJS and Jasmine
describe('service', function () { beforeEach(module('myApp.services')); describe('version', function () { it('should return current version', inject(function (version) { expect(version).toEqual('0.1'); })); });});
Vincenzo (Wilk) Ferrari
@__wilky__
github.com/wilk
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