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Angular Design Patterns and Best Practices

Angular Design Patterns and Best Practices

By : Alvaro Camillo Neto
4.4 (14)
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Angular Design Patterns and Best Practices

Angular Design Patterns and Best Practices

4.4 (14)
By: Alvaro Camillo Neto

Overview of this book

Single page applications (SPAs) have become the standard for most web experiences. Angular, with its batteries-included approach, has emerged as a powerful framework for simplifying the development of these interfaces by offering a comprehensive toolbox. This book guides you through the Angular ecosystem, uncovering invaluable design patterns and harnessing its essential features. The book begins by laying a strong foundation, helping you understand when and why Angular should be your web development framework of choice. The next set of chapters will help you gain expertise in component design and architecting efficient, flexible, and high-performing communication patterns between components. You’ll then delve into Angular's advanced features to create forms in a productive and secure way with robust data model typing. You'll also learn how to enhance productivity using interceptors to reuse code for common functionalities, such as token management, across various apps. The book also covers micro frontend architecture in depth to effectively apply this architectural approach and concludes by helping you master the art of crafting tests and handling errors effortlessly. By the end of this book, you'll have unlocked the full potential of the Angular framework.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
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1
Part 1: Reinforcing the Foundations
7
Part 2: Leveraging Angular’s Capabilities
12
Part 3: Architecture and Deployment

Differentiating environments

After finishing the task of deploying our backend, we need to change our frontend project to make requests to our cloud infrastructure. But here, a problem arises. We want to access our published backend when we are in production, but the team needs to continue accessing the API locally to develop new features in a more practical way. How can we have the best of both worlds?

The answer to this, once again, was thought up by the Angular team and is the creation of configuration files for each development environment.

Until version 14 of Angular, these files were already standard when creating the project (the ng new command). However, to simplify new projects and reduce the learning curve, these files were removed for new projects.

But we shouldn’t worry because to add them, we can use the Angular CLI. On the command line, use the following command:

ng generate environments

After executing the preceding command, the Angular CLI creates...

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