mirror of
https://github.com/Hopiu/angular.js.git
synced 2026-03-17 15:40:22 +00:00
208 lines
10 KiB
Text
208 lines
10 KiB
Text
@ngdoc overview
|
|
@name Developer Guide: Overview
|
|
@description
|
|
|
|
|
|
# What Is Angular?
|
|
|
|
AngularJS is a structural framework for dynamic web apps. It lets you use HTML as your template
|
|
language and lets you extend HTML's syntax to express your application's components clearly and
|
|
succinctly. Out of the box, it eliminates much of the code you currently write through data
|
|
binding and dependency injection. And it all happens in JavaScript within the browser making it an
|
|
ideal partner with any server technology.
|
|
|
|
Angular is what HTML would have been had it been design for applications. HTML is a great
|
|
declarative language for static documents. It does not contain much in the way of creating
|
|
application, and as a result building web-applications is an exercise in *what do I have to do, so
|
|
that I trick the browser in to doing what I want.*
|
|
|
|
Impedance mismatch between dynamic-applications and static-documents are often solved as:
|
|
|
|
* **library** - a collection of functions which are useful when writing web apps. Your code is
|
|
in charge and it calls into the library when it sees fit. i.e.: `jQuery`
|
|
* **frameworks** - a particular implementation of a web-application, where your code fills in
|
|
the details. The framework is in charge and it calls into your code when it needs something
|
|
app specific. i.e.: `knockout`, `sproutcore`, etc...
|
|
|
|
|
|
Angular takes another approach. It attempts to minimize the impedance mismatch between document
|
|
centric HTML and what application needs by creating new HTML constructs. Angular teaches the
|
|
browser new syntax through a construct we call directives. Examples include:
|
|
|
|
* Data binding as in `{{}}`.
|
|
* DOM control structures for repeating/hiding DOM fragments.
|
|
* Support for forms and form validation.
|
|
* Attaching code-behind to DOM elements.
|
|
* Grouping of HTML into reusable components.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
## End-to-end solution
|
|
|
|
Angular tries to be an end to end solution, when building a web-application. This means it is
|
|
not a single piece in an overall puzzle of building a web-application, but an end-to-end solution.
|
|
This makes Angular opinionated about how a CRUD application should be built. But while it is
|
|
opinionated, it also tries to make sure that its opinion is just a starting point, which you can
|
|
easily change. Angular comes with the following out-of-the-box:
|
|
|
|
* Everything you need to build a CRUD app in a cohesive set: Data-binding, basic templating
|
|
directives, form validation, routing, deep-linking, reusable components, dependency injection.
|
|
* Testability story: unit-testing, end-to-end testing, mocks, test harnesses.
|
|
* Seed application with directory layout and test scripts as a starting point.
|
|
|
|
|
|
## Angular Sweet Spot
|
|
|
|
Angular simplifies the application development by presenting a higher level of abstraction to the
|
|
developer. Like any abstraction, it comes at a cost of flexibility. In other words not every app
|
|
is a good fit for Angular. Angular was built for the CRUD application in mind, luckily CRUD
|
|
applications represent at least 90% of the web applications. But to understand what Angular is
|
|
good at one also has to understand when an app is not a good fit for Angular.
|
|
|
|
Games, and GUI editors are examples of very intensive and tricky DOM manipulation. These kinds of
|
|
apps are different from CRUD apps, and as a result are not a good fit for Angular. In these cases
|
|
using something closer to bare metal such as `jQuery` may be a better fit.
|
|
|
|
|
|
# An Introductory Angular Example
|
|
|
|
Below is a typical CRUD application which contains a form. The form values are validated, and
|
|
are used to compute the total, which is formatted to a particular local. These are some common
|
|
concepts which the application developer may face:
|
|
|
|
* attaching data-model to the UI.
|
|
* writing, reading and validating user input.
|
|
* computing new values based on the model.
|
|
* formatting output in a user specific locale.
|
|
|
|
<example>
|
|
<file name="script.js">
|
|
function InvoiceCntl($scope) {
|
|
$scope.qty = 1;
|
|
$scope.cost = 19.95;
|
|
}
|
|
</file>
|
|
<file name="index.html">
|
|
<div ng-controller="InvoiceCntl">
|
|
<b>Invoice:</b>
|
|
<br>
|
|
<br>
|
|
<table>
|
|
<tr><td>Quantity</td><td>Cost</td></tr>
|
|
<tr>
|
|
<td><input type="integer" min="0" ng-model="qty" required ></td>
|
|
<td><input type="number" ng-model="cost" required ></td>
|
|
</tr>
|
|
</table>
|
|
<hr>
|
|
<b>Total:</b> {{qty * cost | currency}}
|
|
</div>
|
|
</file>
|
|
<file name="scenario.js">
|
|
it('should show of angular binding', function() {
|
|
expect(binding('qty * cost')).toEqual('$19.95');
|
|
input('qty').enter('2');
|
|
input('cost').enter('5.00');
|
|
expect(binding('qty * cost')).toEqual('$10.00');
|
|
});
|
|
</file>
|
|
</example>
|
|
|
|
Try out the Live Preview above, and then let's walk through the example and describe what's going
|
|
on.
|
|
|
|
In the `<html>` tag, we specify that it is an angular
|
|
application with the `ng-app` directive. The `ng-app' will cause the angular to {@link
|
|
bootstrap auto initialize} your application.
|
|
|
|
<html ng-app>
|
|
|
|
We load the angular using the `<script>` tag:
|
|
|
|
<script src="http://code.angularjs.org/angular-?.?.?.min.js"></script>
|
|
|
|
From the `ng-model` attribute of the `<input>` tags, angular automatically sets up two-way data
|
|
binding, and we also demonstrate some easy input validation:
|
|
|
|
Quantity: <input type="integer" min="0" ng-model="qty" required >
|
|
Cost: <input type="number" ng-model="cost" required >
|
|
|
|
These input widgets look normal enough, but consider these points:
|
|
|
|
* When this page loaded, angular bound the names of the input widgets (`qty` and `cost`) to
|
|
variables of the same name. Think of those variables as the "Model" component of the
|
|
Model-View-Controller design pattern.
|
|
* Note that the HTML widget {@link api/angular.module.ng.$compileProvider.directive.input input}
|
|
has special powers. The input invalidates itself by turning red when you enter invalid data or
|
|
leave the the input fields blank. These new widget behavior make it easier to implement field
|
|
validation common in CRUD applications.
|
|
|
|
And finally, the mysterious `{{ double curly braces }}`:
|
|
|
|
Total: {{qty * cost | currency}}
|
|
|
|
This notation, `{{ _expression_ }}`, is angular markup for data-binding. The expression itself can
|
|
be a combination of both an expression and a {@link dev_guide.templates.filters filter}: `{{
|
|
expression | filter }}`. Angular provides filters for formatting display data.
|
|
|
|
In the example above, the expression in double-curly braces directs angular to "Bind the data we
|
|
got from the input widgets to the display, multiply them together, and format the resulting number
|
|
into output that looks like money."
|
|
|
|
Notice that we achieved this application behavior not by calling angular methods, nor by
|
|
implementing application specific behavior as framework. We achieved the behavior because the
|
|
browser behaved more in line what is needed for dynamic web-application rather then what is needed
|
|
for static-document. Angular has lowered the impedance mismatch to the point where no
|
|
library/framework calls are needed.
|
|
|
|
|
|
# The Zen of Angular
|
|
|
|
Angular is built around the belief that declarative code is better than imperative when it comes
|
|
to building UIs and wiring software components together, while imperative code is excellent for
|
|
expressing business logic.
|
|
|
|
|
|
* It is a very good idea to decouple DOM manipulation from app logic. This dramatically improves
|
|
the testability of the code.
|
|
* It is a really, _really_ good idea to regard app testing as equal in importance to app
|
|
writing. Testing difficulty is dramatically affected by the way the code is structured.
|
|
* It is an excellent idea to decouple the client side of an app from the server side. This
|
|
allows development work to progress in parallel, and allows for reuse of both sides.
|
|
* It is very helpful indeed if the framework guides developers through the entire journey of
|
|
building an app: from designing the UI, through writing the business logic, to testing.
|
|
* It is always good to make common tasks trivial and difficult tasks possible.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Angular frees you from the following pain:
|
|
|
|
* **Registering callbacks:** Registering callbacks clutters your code, making it hard to see the
|
|
forest for the trees. Removing common boilerplate code such as callbacks is a good thing. It
|
|
vastly reduces the amount of JavaScript coding _you_ have to do, and it makes it easier to see
|
|
what your application does.
|
|
* **Manipulating HTML DOM programmatically:** Manipulating HTML DOM is a cornerstone of AJAX
|
|
applications, but it's cumbersome and error-prone. By declaratively describing how the UI
|
|
should change as your application state changes, you are freed from low level DOM manipulation
|
|
tasks. Most applications written with angular never have to programmatically manipulate the
|
|
DOM, although you can if you want to.
|
|
* **Marshaling data to and from the UI:** CRUD operations make up the majority of AJAX
|
|
applications. The flow of marshaling data from the server to an internal object to an HTML
|
|
form, allowing users to modify the form, validating the form, displaying validation errors,
|
|
returning to an internal model, and then back to the server, creates a lot of boilerplate
|
|
code. Angular eliminates almost all of this boilerplate, leaving code that describes the
|
|
overall flow of the application rather than all of the implementation details.
|
|
* **Writing tons of initialization code just to get started:** Typically you need to write a lot
|
|
of plumbing just to get a basic "Hello World" AJAX app working. With angular you can bootstrap
|
|
your app easily using services, which are auto-injected into your application in a {@link
|
|
http://code.google.com/p/google-guice/ Guice}-like dependency-injection style. This allows you
|
|
to get started developing features quickly. As a bonus, you get full control over the
|
|
initialization process in automated tests.
|
|
|
|
|
|
# Watch a Presentation About Angular
|
|
|
|
Here is an early presentation on angular, but note that substantial development has occurred since
|
|
the talk was given in July of 2010.
|
|
|
|
<iframe width="560" height="315" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/bfrn5VNpwsg" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>
|