Bootstrapping
Prerequisites
A basic understanding of the following:
An NgModule describes how the application parts fit together. Every application has at least one Angular module, the root module that you bootstrap to launch the application. By convention, it is usually called AppModule
.
If you use the Angular CLI to generate an app, the default AppModule
is as follows:
/* JavaScript imports */ import { BrowserModule } from '@angular/platform-browser'; import { NgModule } from '@angular/core'; import { FormsModule } from '@angular/forms'; import { HttpClientModule } from '@angular/common/http'; import { AppComponent } from './app.component'; /* the AppModule class with the @NgModule decorator */ @NgModule({ declarations: [ AppComponent ], imports: [ BrowserModule, FormsModule, HttpClientModule ], providers: [], bootstrap: [AppComponent] }) export class AppModule { }
After the import statements is a class with the @NgModule
decorator.
The @NgModule
decorator identifies AppModule
as an NgModule
class. @NgModule
takes a metadata object that tells Angular how to compile and launch the application.
- declarations—this application's lone component.
-
imports—import
BrowserModule
to have browser specific services such as DOM rendering, sanitization, and location. - providers—the service providers.
-
bootstrap—the root component that Angular creates and inserts into the
index.html
host web page.
The default application created by the Angular CLI only has one component, AppComponent
, so it is in both the declarations
and the bootstrap
arrays.
The declarations
array
The module's declarations
array tells Angular which components belong to that module. As you create more components, add them to declarations
.
You must declare every component in exactly one NgModule
class. If you use a component without declaring it, Angular returns an error message.
The declarations
array only takes declarables. Declarables are components, directives and pipes. All of a module's declarables must be in the declarations
array. Declarables must belong to exactly one module. The compiler emits an error if you try to declare the same class in more than one module.
These declared classes are visible within the module but invisible to components in a different module unless they are exported from this module and the other module imports this one.
An example of what goes into a declarations array follows:
declarations: [ YourComponent, YourPipe, YourDirective ],
A declarable can only belong to one module, so only declare it in one @NgModule
. When you need it elsewhere, import the module that has the declarable you need in it.
Only @NgModule
references go in the imports
array.
Using directives with @NgModule
Use the declarations
array for directives. To use a directive, component, or pipe in a module, you must do a few things:
- Export it from the file where you wrote it.
- Import it into the appropriate module.
- Declare it in the
@NgModule
declarations
array.
Those three steps look like the following. In the file where you create your directive, export it. The following example, named ItemDirective
is the default directive structure that the CLI generates in its own file, item.directive.ts
:
import { Directive } from '@angular/core'; @Directive({ selector: '[appItem]' }) export class ItemDirective { // code goes here constructor() { } }
The key point here is that you have to export it so you can import it elsewhere. Next, import it into the NgModule, in this example app.module.ts
, with a JavaScript import statement:
import { ItemDirective } from './item.directive';
And in the same file, add it to the @NgModule
declarations
array:
declarations: [ AppComponent, ItemDirective ],
Now you could use your ItemDirective
in a component. This example uses AppModule
, but you'd do it the same way for a feature module. For more about directives, see Attribute Directives and Structural Directives. You'd also use the same technique for pipes and components.
Remember, components, directives, and pipes belong to one module only. You only need to declare them once in your app because you share them by importing the necessary modules. This saves you time and helps keep your app lean.
The imports
array
The module's imports
array appears exclusively in the @NgModule
metadata object. It tells Angular about other NgModules that this particular module needs to function properly.
This list of modules are those that export components, directives, or pipes that the component templates in this module reference. In this case, the component is AppComponent
, which references components, directives, or pipes in BrowserModule
, FormsModule
, or HttpClientModule
. A component template can reference another component, directive, or pipe when the referenced class is declared in this module or the class was imported from another module.
The providers
array
The providers array is where you list the services the app needs. When you list services here, they are available app-wide. You can scope them when using feature modules and lazy loading. For more information, see Providers.
The bootstrap
array
The application launches by bootstrapping the root AppModule
, which is also referred to as an entryComponent
. Among other things, the bootstrapping process creates the component(s) listed in the bootstrap
array and inserts each one into the browser DOM.
Each bootstrapped component is the base of its own tree of components. Inserting a bootstrapped component usually triggers a cascade of component creations that fill out that tree.
While you can put more than one component tree on a host web page, most applications have only one component tree and bootstrap a single root component.
This one root component is usually called AppComponent
and is in the root module's bootstrap
array.
More about Angular Modules
For more on NgModules you're likely to see frequently in apps, see Frequently Used Modules.
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Licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution License 4.0.
https://v7.angular.io/guide/bootstrapping