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Angular for Enterprise Applications

You're reading from   Angular for Enterprise Applications Build scalable Angular apps using the minimalist Router-first architecture

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jan 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781805127123
Length 592 pages
Edition 3rd Edition
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Author (1):
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Doguhan Uluca Doguhan Uluca
Author Profile Icon Doguhan Uluca
Doguhan Uluca
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Table of Contents (14) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Angular’s Architecture and Concepts FREE CHAPTER 2. Forms, Observables, Signals, and Subjects 3. Architecting an Enterprise App 4. Creating a Router-First Line-of-Business App 5. Designing Authentication and Authorization 6. Implementing Role-Based Navigation 7. Working with REST and GraphQL APIs 8. Recipes – Reusability, Forms, and Caching 9. Recipes – Master/Detail, Data Tables, and NgRx 10. Releasing to Production with CI/CD 11. Other Books You May Enjoy
12. Index
Appendix A

Further reading

The article on Automating the Setup of the Local Developer Machine by Vishwas Parameshwarappa is a great place to start for using Vagrant, found at https://www. vagrantup.com. You can find the article at https://Red-gate.com/simple-talk/ sysadmin/general/automating-setup-local-developer-machine.Other tools include Chef, found at https://www.chef.io/, and Puppet, found at https://puppet.com. Some developers prefer to work within Docker containers during coding, found at https://www.docker.com. This is done to isolate different versions of SDKs from each other. Specific development tools cannot be scoped to a given folder and must be installed globally or OS-wide, making it very difficult to work on multiple projects at the same time. I recommend staying away from this type of setup if you can avoid it. In the future, I expect such chores are going to be automated by IDEs, as CPU core counts increase, and virtualization tech has better hardware acceleration.

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