Infragistics Blogs
Get the latest trends in low-code, app development, product updates and more. Here we share our knowledge, best advice, how-tos, research, insights, and more - all with the aim of helping you learn how to build better apps faster.
This blog shows how Angular ViewChild and ContentChild let you access and manipulate child components and DOM elements within a component's view. Read all.
In this article, we will learn to create a component dynamically. You may need to load a component dynamically in various scenarios such as want to show a popup modal etc.
Angular pipes take data as input and transform it to your desired output. For example, using interpolation you are displaying name of the product. Now you want the product name always displayed in the uppercase. You can do this using Angular pipe uppercase.
In this blog post, we will learn to create custom validators in Angular Reactive Forms. If you are new to reactive forms, learn how to create your first Angular reactive form here.
Unlike AngularJS, Angular does not have two-way data binding. When I say, Angular doesn’t have two-way data binding, it does not mean you cannot achieve that.
To understand @HostListener and @HostBinding, you should have basic knowledge about directives in Angular. There are three types of directives in Angular:
Do you know how to create an Angular Reactive Form? Read this blog post to learn all about the process. Detailed steps included. Learn more.
In Angular, content projection is used to project content in a component. Let’s take a closer look at how it works:
A Note from Infragistics: Angular (formerly Angular 2) represents a huge departure from Angular JS (formerly Angular 1). While Angular JS used a more traditional MVC architecture that relied primarily on Controllers which controlled the interaction between a Model and the View, Angular has taken a more self-contained, composable Component based approach.
In this article, we will focus on how a child component can interact with a parent component using the @Input() property. We’ll also look into intercepting the input message and logging changes in the input message.