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Learning Angular

You're reading from   Learning Angular A no-nonsense beginner's guide to building web applications with Angular 10 and TypeScript

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Product type Paperback
Published in Sep 2020
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781839210662
Length 430 pages
Edition 3rd Edition
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Authors (2):
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Aristeidis Bampakos Aristeidis Bampakos
Author Profile Icon Aristeidis Bampakos
Aristeidis Bampakos
Pablo Deeleman Pablo Deeleman
Author Profile Icon Pablo Deeleman
Pablo Deeleman
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Toc

Table of Contents (19) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Getting Started with Angular
2. Chapter 1: Building Your First Angular App FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Introduction to TypeScript 4. Section 2: Components – the Basic Building Blocks of an Angular App
5. Chapter 3: Component Interaction and Inter-Communication 6. Chapter 4: Enhance Components with Pipes and Directives 7. Chapter 5: Structure an Angular App 8. Chapter 6: Enrich Components with Asynchronous Data Services 9. Section 3: User Experience and Testability
10. Chapter 7: Navigate through Components with Routing 11. Chapter 8: Orchestrating Validation Experiences in Forms 12. Chapter 9: Introduction to Angular Material 13. Chapter 10: Giving Motion to Components with Animations 14. Chapter 11: Unit test an Angular App 15. Section 4: Deployment and Practice
16. Chapter 12: Bringing an Angular App to Production 17. Chapter 13: Develop a Real-World Angular App 18. Other Books You May Enjoy

Organizing components into modules

As we learned in Chapter 3, Component Interaction and Inter-Communication, Angular 10 applications are represented as a tree of components. The top main component (usually dropped somewhere in the main HTML index file) acts as a global placeholder where child components turn into hosts for other nested child components, and so on. Modern web applications based on web component architectures often conform to this sort of tree hierarchy.

There are distinct advantages to this approach. On the one hand, reusability does not get compromised, and we can reuse components throughout the component tree with little effort. Secondly, the resulting granularity reduces the burden required for envisioning, designing, and maintaining larger applications. We can simply focus on a single piece of UI and then wrap its functionality around new layers of abstraction until we wrap up a full-blown application from the ground up.

Alternatively, we can approach our...

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