Because HTML has Angular brackets and "ng" sounds like "Angular".
AngularJS fits the definition of a framework the best, even though it's much more lightweight than a typical framework and that's why many confuse it with a library.
AngularJS is 100% JavaScript, 100% client-side and compatible with both desktop and mobile browsers. So it's definitely not a plugin or some other native browser extension.
In Angular 1 we do not allow intentional breaking changes to appear in versions where only the "patch" number changes. For example between 1.3.12 and 1.3.13 there can be no breaking changes. We do allow breaking changes happen between "minor" number changes. For example between 1.3.15 and 1.4.0 there will be a number of breaking changes. We also allow breaking changes between beta releases of Angular. For example between 1.4.0-beta.4 and 1.4.0-beta.5 there may be breaking changes. We try hard to minimize these kinds of change only to those where there is a strong use case such as a strongly requested feature improvement, a considerable simplification of the code or a measurable performance improvement.
When adding new code to branches of Angular, have a very stringent commit policy:
The Angular code base has a very large set of unit tests (over 4000) and end to end tests, which are pretty comprehensive. This means that a breaking change will require one or more tests to be changed to allow the tests to pass. So when a commit includes tests that are being removed or modified, this is a flag that the code might include a breaking change. When reviewing the commit we can then decide whether there really is a breaking change and if it is appropriate for the branch to which it is being merged. If so, then we require that the commit message contains an appropriate breaking change message.
Additionally, when a commit lands in our master repository it is synced to Google where we test it against over 2000 applications using the test suites of these applications. This allows us to catch regressions quickly before a release. We've had a pretty good experience with this setup. Only bugs that affect features not used at Google or without sufficient test coverage, have a chance of making it through.
Lastly, when we are making a release we generate updates to the changelog directly from the commits. This generated update contains a highlighted section that contains all the breaking changes that have been extracted from the commits. We can quickly see in the new changelog exactly what commits contain breaking changes and so can application developers when they are deciding whether to update to a new version of Angular.
At the highest level, Angular does look like just another templating system. But there is one important reason why the Angular templating system is different, that makes it very good fit for application development: bidirectional data binding. The template is compiled in the browser and the compilation step produces a live view. This means you, the developers, don't need to write code to constantly sync the view with the model and the model with the view as in other templating systems.
Like any other technology, AngularJS is not impervious to attack. Angular does, however, provide built-in protection from basic security holes, including cross-site scripting and HTML injection attacks. AngularJS does round-trip escaping on all strings for you and even offers XSRF protection for server-side communication.
AngularJS was designed to be compatible with other security measures like Content Security Policy (CSP), HTTPS (SSL/TLS) and server-side authentication and authorization that greatly reduce the possible attack vectors and we highly recommend their use.
Yes. See instructions in Downloading
.
We run our extensive test suite against the following browsers: the latest versions of Chrome, Firefox, Safari, and Safari for iOs, as well as Internet Explorer versions 9-11. See Internet Explorer Compatibility for more details on supporting legacy IE browsers.
If a browser is untested, it doesn't mean it won't work; for example, older Android (2.3.x) is supported in the sense that we avoid the dot notation for reserved words as property names, but we don't actively test changes against it. You can also expect browsers to work that share a large part of their codebase with a browser we test, such as Opera > version 12 (uses the Blink engine), or the various Firefox derivatives.
The startup time heavily depends on your network connection, state of the cache, browser used and available hardware, but typically we measure bootstrap time in tens or hundreds of milliseconds.
The runtime performance will vary depending on the number and complexity of bindings on the page as well as the speed of your backend (for apps that fetch data from the backend). For an illustration, we typically build snappy apps with hundreds or thousands of active bindings.
The size of the file is ~50KB compressed and minified.
Yes, you can use widgets from the Closure Library in Angular.
Yes, Angular can use jQuery if it's present in your app when the application is being bootstrapped. If jQuery is not present in your script path, Angular falls back to its own implementation of the subset of jQuery that we call jQLite.
Angular 1.3 only supports jQuery 2.1 or above. jQuery 1.7 and newer might work correctly with Angular but we don't guarantee that.
Very testable and designed this way from the ground up. It has an integrated dependency injection
framework, provides mocks for many heavy dependencies (server-side communication). See
ngMock
for details.
Watch the July 17, 2012 talk "AngularJS Intro + Dependency Injection".
The MIT License.
Yes! You can find design files in our github repository, under "angular.js/images/logo" The logo design is licensed under a "Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License". If you have some other use in mind, contact us.
We often bring a few t-shirts and stickers to events where we're presenting. If you want to order your own, the folks who make our schwag will be happy to do a custom run for you, based on our existing template. By using the design they have on file, they'll waive the setup costs, and you can order any quantity you need.
Stickers For orders of 250 stickers or more within Canada or the United States, contact Tom Witting (or anyone in sales) via email at tom@stickergiant.com, and tell him you want to order some AngularJS stickers just like the ones in job #42711. You'll have to give them your own info for billing and shipping.
As long as the design stays exactly the same, StickerGiant will give you a reorder discount.
For a smaller order, or for other countries, we suggest downloading the logo artwork and making your own.
The Angular support channel (#angularjs on Freenode) sees a number of recurring pitfalls that new users of Angular fall into. This document aims to point them out before you discover them the hard way.
Stop trying to use jQuery to modify the DOM in controllers. Really. That includes adding elements, removing elements, retrieving their contents, showing and hiding them. Use built-in directives, or write your own where necessary, to do your DOM manipulation. See below about duplicating functionality.
If you're struggling to break the habit, consider removing jQuery from your app. Really. Angular has the $http service and powerful directives that make it almost always unnecessary. Angular's bundled jQLite has a handful of the features most commonly used in writing Angular directives, especially binding to events.
There's a good chance that your app isn't the first to require certain functionality. There are a few pieces of Angular that are particularly likely to be reimplemented out of old habits.
ng-repeat
ng-repeat
gets this a lot.
People try to use jQuery (see above) to add more elements to some container as they're fetched from the server.
No, bad dog.
This is what ng-repeat
is for, and it does its job very well.
Store the data from the server in an array on your $scope
, and bind it to the DOM with ng-repeat
.
ng-show
ng-show
gets this frequently too.
Conditionally showing and hiding things using jQuery is a common pattern in other apps, but Angular has a better way.
ng-show
(and ng-hide
) conditionally show and hide elements based on boolean expressions.
Describe the conditions for showing and hiding an element in terms of $scope
variables:
<div ng-show="!loggedIn"><a href="#/login">Click here to log in</a></div>
Note also the counterpart ng-hide
and similar ng-disabled
.
Note especially the powerful ng-switch
that should be used instead of several mutually exclusive ng-show
s.
ng-class
ng-class
is the last of the big three.
Conditionally applying classes to elements is another thing commonly done manually using jQuery.
Angular, of course, has a better way.
You can give ng-class
a whitespace-separated set of class names, and then it's identical to ordinary class
.
That's not very exciting, so there's a second syntax:
<div ng-class="{ errorClass: isError, warningClass: isWarning, okClass: !isError && !isWarning }">...</div>
Where you give ng-class
an object, whose keys are CSS class names and whose values are conditional expressions using $scope
variables.
The element will then have all the classes whose conditions are truthy, and none of those whose conditions are falsy.
Note also the handy ng-class-even
and ng-class-odd
, and the related though somewhat different ng-style
.
$watch
and $apply
Angular's two-way data binding is the root of all awesome in Angular. However, it's not magic, and there are some situations where you need to give it a nudge in the right direction.
When you bind a value to an element in Angular using ng-model
, ng-repeat
, etc., Angular creates a $watch
on that value.
Then whenever a value on a scope changes, all $watch
es observing that element are executed, and everything updates.
Sometimes, usually when you're writing a custom directive, you will have to define your own $watch
on a scope value to make the directive react to changes.
On the flip side, sometimes you change a scope value in some code, but the app doesn't react to it.
Angular checks for scope variable changes after pieces of your code have finished running; for example, when ng-click
calls a function on your scope, Angular will check for changes and react.
However, some code is outside of Angular and you'll have to call scope.$apply()
yourself to trigger the update.
This is most commonly seen in event handlers in custom directives.
ng-repeat
with other directivesng-repeat
is extremely useful, one of the most powerful directives in Angular.
However the transformation it applies to the DOM is substantial.
Therefore applying other directives (such as ng-show
, ng-controller
and others) to the same element as ng-repeat
generally leads to problems.
If you want to apply a directive to the whole repeat, wrap the repeat in a parent element and put it there.
If you want to apply a directive to each inner piece of the repeat, put it on a child of the element with ng-repeat
.
$rootScope
exists, but it can be used for evilScopes in Angular form a hierarchy, prototypally inheriting from a root scope at the top of the tree. Usually this can be ignored, since most views have a controller, and therefore a scope, of their own.
Occasionally there are pieces of data that you want to make global to the whole app.
For these, you can inject $rootScope
and set values on it like any other scope.
Since the scopes inherit from the root scope, these values will be available to the expressions attached to directives like ng-show
just like values on your local $scope
.
Of course, global state sucks and you should use $rootScope
sparingly, like you would (hopefully) use with global variables in any language.
In particular, don't use it for code, only data.
If you're tempted to put a function on $rootScope
, it's almost always better to put it in a service that can be injected where it's needed, and more easily tested.
Conversely, don't create a service whose only purpose in life is to store and return bits of data.