An Angular application consists mainly of components and their HTML templates. Because the components and templates provided by Angular cannot be understood by the browser directly, Angular applications require a compilation process before they can run in a browser.
The Angular ahead-of-time (AOT) compiler converts your Angular HTML and TypeScript code into efficient JavaScript code during the build phase before the browser downloads and runs that code. Compiling your application during the build process provides a faster rendering in the browser.
This guide explains how to specify metadata and apply available compiler options to compile your applications efficiently using the AOT compiler.
Watch Alex Rickabaugh explain the Angular compiler at AngularConnect 2019.
Here are some reasons you might want to use AOT.
Faster rendering With AOT, the browser downloads a pre-compiled version of the application. The browser loads executable code so it can render the application immediately, without waiting to compile the app first.
Fewer asynchronous requests The compiler inlines external HTML templates and CSS style sheets within the application JavaScript, eliminating separate ajax requests for those source files.
Smaller Angular framework download size There's no need to download the Angular compiler if the app is already compiled. The compiler is roughly half of Angular itself, so omitting it dramatically reduces the application payload.
Detect template errors earlier The AOT compiler detects and reports template binding errors during the build step before users can see them.
Better security AOT compiles HTML templates and components into JavaScript files long before they are served to the client. With no templates to read and no risky client-side HTML or JavaScript evaluation, there are fewer opportunities for injection attacks.
Angular offers two ways to compile your application:
When you run the ng build
(build only) or ng serve
(build and serve locally) CLI commands, the type of compilation (JIT or AOT) depends on the value of the aot
property in your build configuration specified in angular.json
. By default, aot
is set to true
for new CLI apps.
See the CLI command reference and Building and serving Angular apps for more information.
The Angular AOT compiler extracts metadata to interpret the parts of the application that Angular is supposed to manage. You can specify the metadata explicitly in decorators such as @Component()
and @Input()
, or implicitly in the constructor declarations of the decorated classes. The metadata tells Angular how to construct instances of your application classes and interact with them at runtime.
In the following example, the @Component()
metadata object and the class constructor tell Angular how to create and display an instance of TypicalComponent
.
@Component({ selector: 'app-typical', template: '<div>A typical component for {{data.name}}</div>' }) export class TypicalComponent { @Input() data: TypicalData; constructor(private someService: SomeService) { ... } }
The Angular compiler extracts the metadata once and generates a factory for TypicalComponent
. When it needs to create a TypicalComponent
instance, Angular calls the factory, which produces a new visual element, bound to a new instance of the component class with its injected dependency.
There are three phases of AOT compilation.
Phase 1 is code analysis. In this phase, the TypeScript compiler and AOT collector create a representation of the source. The collector does not attempt to interpret the metadata it collects. It represents the metadata as best it can and records errors when it detects a metadata syntax violation.
Phase 2 is code generation. In this phase, the compiler's StaticReflector
interprets the metadata collected in phase 1, performs additional validation of the metadata, and throws an error if it detects a metadata restriction violation.
Phase 3 is template type checking. In this optional phase, the Angular template compiler uses the TypeScript compiler to validate the binding expressions in templates. You can enable this phase explicitly by setting the fullTemplateTypeCheck
configuration option; see Angular compiler options.
You write metadata in a subset of TypeScript that must conform to the following general constraints:
For additional guidelines and instructions on preparing an application for AOT compilation, see Angular: Writing AOT-friendly applications.
Errors in AOT compilation commonly occur because of metadata that does not conform to the compiler's requirements (as described more fully below). For help in understanding and resolving these problems, see AOT Metadata Errors.
You can provide options in the TypeScript configuration file that controls the compilation process. See Angular compiler options for a complete list of available options.
The TypeScript compiler does some of the analytic work of the first phase. It emits the .d.ts
type definition files with type information that the AOT compiler needs to generate application code. At the same time, the AOT collector analyzes the metadata recorded in the Angular decorators and outputs metadata information in .metadata.json
files, one per .d.ts
file.
You can think of .metadata.json
as a diagram of the overall structure of a decorator's metadata, represented as an abstract syntax tree (AST).
Angular's schema.ts describes the JSON format as a collection of TypeScript interfaces.
The AOT collector only understands a subset of JavaScript. Define metadata objects with the following limited syntax:
Syntax | Example |
---|---|
Literal object | {cherry: true, apple: true, mincemeat: false} |
Literal array | ['cherries', 'flour', 'sugar'] |
Spread in literal array | ['apples', 'flour', ...the_rest] |
Calls | bake(ingredients) |
New | new Oven() |
Property access | pie.slice |
Array index | ingredients[0] |
Identity reference | Component |
A template string | `pie is ${multiplier} times better than cake` |
Literal string | pi |
Literal number | 3.14153265 |
Literal boolean | true |
Literal null | null |
Supported prefix operator | !cake |
Supported binary operator | a+b |
Conditional operator | a ? b : c |
Parentheses | (a+b) |
If an expression uses unsupported syntax, the collector writes an error node to the .metadata.json
file. The compiler later reports the error if it needs that piece of metadata to generate the application code.
If you want
ngc
to report syntax errors immediately rather than produce a.metadata.json
file with errors, set thestrictMetadataEmit
option in the TypeScript configuration file."angularCompilerOptions": { ... "strictMetadataEmit" : true }Angular libraries have this option to ensure that all Angular
.metadata.json
files are clean and it is a best practice to do the same when building your own libraries.
The AOT compiler does not support function expressions and arrow functions, also called lambda functions.
Consider the following component decorator:
@Component({ ... providers: [{provide: server, useFactory: () => new Server()}] })
The AOT collector does not support the arrow function, () => new Server()
, in a metadata expression. It generates an error node in place of the function. When the compiler later interprets this node, it reports an error that invites you to turn the arrow function into an exported function.
You can fix the error by converting to this:
export function serverFactory() { return new Server(); } @Component({ ... providers: [{provide: server, useFactory: serverFactory}] })
In version 5 and later, the compiler automatically performs this rewriting while emitting the .js
file.
The compiler can only resolve references to exported symbols. The collector, however, can evaluate an expression during collection and record the result in the .metadata.json
, rather than the original expression. This allows you to make limited use of non-exported symbols within expressions.
For example, the collector can evaluate the expression 1 + 2 + 3 + 4
and replace it with the result, 10
. This process is called folding. An expression that can be reduced in this manner is foldable.
The collector can evaluate references to module-local const
declarations and initialized var
and let
declarations, effectively removing them from the .metadata.json
file.
Consider the following component definition:
const template = '<div>{{hero.name}}</div>'; @Component({ selector: 'app-hero', template: template }) export class HeroComponent { @Input() hero: Hero; }
The compiler could not refer to the template
constant because it isn't exported. The collector, however, can fold the template
constant into the metadata definition by in-lining its contents. The effect is the same as if you had written:
@Component({ selector: 'app-hero', template: '<div>{{hero.name}}</div>' }) export class HeroComponent { @Input() hero: Hero; }
There is no longer a reference to template
and, therefore, nothing to trouble the compiler when it later interprets the collector's output in .metadata.json
.
You can take this example a step further by including the template
constant in another expression:
const template = '<div>{{hero.name}}</div>'; @Component({ selector: 'app-hero', template: template + '<div>{{hero.title}}</div>' }) export class HeroComponent { @Input() hero: Hero; }
The collector reduces this expression to its equivalent folded string:
'<div>{{hero.name}}</div><div>{{hero.title}}</div>'
The following table describes which expressions the collector can and cannot fold:
Syntax | Foldable |
---|---|
Literal object | yes |
Literal array | yes |
Spread in literal array | no |
Calls | no |
New | no |
Property access | yes, if target is foldable |
Array index | yes, if target and index are foldable |
Identity reference | yes, if it is a reference to a local |
A template with no substitutions | yes |
A template with substitutions | yes, if the substitutions are foldable |
Literal string | yes |
Literal number | yes |
Literal boolean | yes |
Literal null | yes |
Supported prefix operator | yes, if operand is foldable |
Supported binary operator | yes, if both left and right are foldable |
Conditional operator | yes, if condition is foldable |
Parentheses | yes, if the expression is foldable |
If an expression is not foldable, the collector writes it to .metadata.json
as an AST for the compiler to resolve.
The collector makes no attempt to understand the metadata that it collects and outputs to .metadata.json
. It represents the metadata as best it can and records errors when it detects a metadata syntax violation. It's the compiler's job to interpret the .metadata.json
in the code generation phase.
The compiler understands all syntax forms that the collector supports, but it may reject syntactically correct metadata if the semantics violate compiler rules.
The compiler can only reference exported symbols.
@Input()
property private or protected.// BAD CODE - title is private @Component({ selector: 'app-root', template: '<h1>{{title}}</h1>' }) export class AppComponent { private title = 'My App'; // Bad }
The collector can represent a function call or object creation with new
as long as the syntax is valid. The compiler, however, can later refuse to generate a call to a particular function or creation of a particular object.
The compiler can only create instances of certain classes, supports only core decorators, and only supports calls to macros (functions or static methods) that return expressions.
New instances
The compiler only allows metadata that create instances of the class InjectionToken
from @angular/core
.
Supported decorators
The compiler only supports metadata for the Angular decorators in the @angular/core
module.
Function calls
Factory functions must be exported, named functions. The AOT compiler does not support lambda expressions ("arrow functions") for factory functions.
The collector accepts any function or static method that contains a single return
statement. The compiler, however, only supports macros in the form of functions or static methods that return an expression.
For example, consider the following function:
export function wrapInArray<T>(value: T): T[] { return [value]; }
You can call the wrapInArray
in a metadata definition because it returns the value of an expression that conforms to the compiler's restrictive JavaScript subset.
You might use wrapInArray()
like this:
@NgModule({ declarations: wrapInArray(TypicalComponent) }) export class TypicalModule {}
The compiler treats this usage as if you had written:
@NgModule({ declarations: [TypicalComponent] }) export class TypicalModule {}
The Angular RouterModule
exports two macro static methods, forRoot
and forChild
, to help declare root and child routes. Review the source code for these methods to see how macros can simplify configuration of complex NgModules.
The compiler treats object literals containing the fields useClass
, useValue
, useFactory
, and data
specially, converting the expression initializing one of these fields into an exported variable that replaces the expression. This process of rewriting these expressions removes all the restrictions on what can be in them because the compiler doesn't need to know the expression's value—it just needs to be able to generate a reference to the value.
You might write something like:
class TypicalServer { } @NgModule({ providers: [{provide: SERVER, useFactory: () => TypicalServer}] }) export class TypicalModule {}
Without rewriting, this would be invalid because lambdas are not supported and TypicalServer
is not exported. To allow this, the compiler automatically rewrites this to something like:
class TypicalServer { } export const ɵ0 = () => new TypicalServer(); @NgModule({ providers: [{provide: SERVER, useFactory: ɵ0}] }) export class TypicalModule {}
This allows the compiler to generate a reference to ɵ0
in the factory without having to know what the value of ɵ0
contains.
The compiler does the rewriting during the emit of the .js
file. It does not, however, rewrite the .d.ts
file, so TypeScript doesn't recognize it as being an export. and it does not interfere with the ES module's exported API.
One of the Angular compiler's most helpful features is the ability to type-check expressions within templates, and catch any errors before they cause crashes at runtime. In the template type-checking phase, the Angular template compiler uses the TypeScript compiler to validate the binding expressions in templates.
Enable this phase explicitly by adding the compiler option "fullTemplateTypeCheck"
in the "angularCompilerOptions"
of the project's TypeScript configuration file (see Angular Compiler Options).
In Angular Ivy, the template type checker has been completely rewritten to be more capable as well as stricter, meaning it can catch a variety of new errors that the previous type checker would not detect.
As a result, templates that previously compiled under View Engine can fail type checking under Ivy. This can happen because Ivy's stricter checking catches genuine errors, or because application code is not typed correctly, or because the application uses libraries in which typings are inaccurate or not specific enough.
This stricter type checking is not enabled by default in version 9, but can be enabled by setting the
strictTemplates
configuration option. We do expect to make strict type checking the default in the future.For more information about type-checking options, and about improvements to template type checking in version 9 and above, see Template type checking.
Template validation produces error messages when a type error is detected in a template binding expression, similar to how type errors are reported by the TypeScript compiler against code in a .ts
file.
For example, consider the following component:
@Component({ selector: 'my-component', template: '{{person.addresss.street}}' }) class MyComponent { person?: Person; }
This produces the following error:
my.component.ts.MyComponent.html(1,1): : Property 'addresss' does not exist on type 'Person'. Did you mean 'address'?
The file name reported in the error message, my.component.ts.MyComponent.html
, is a synthetic file generated by the template compiler that holds contents of the MyComponent
class template. The compiler never writes this file to disk. The line and column numbers are relative to the template string in the @Component
annotation of the class, MyComponent
in this case. If a component uses templateUrl
instead of template
, the errors are reported in the HTML file referenced by the templateUrl
instead of a synthetic file.
The error location is the beginning of the text node that contains the interpolation expression with the error. If the error is in an attribute binding such as [value]="person.address.street"
, the error location is the location of the attribute that contains the error.
The validation uses the TypeScript type checker and the options supplied to the TypeScript compiler to control how detailed the type validation is. For example, if the strictTypeChecks
is specified, the error my.component.ts.MyComponent.html(1,1): : Object is possibly 'undefined'
is reported as well as the above error message.
The expression used in an ngIf
directive is used to narrow type unions in the Angular template compiler, the same way the if
expression does in TypeScript. For example, to avoid Object is possibly 'undefined'
error in the template above, modify it to only emit the interpolation if the value of person
is initialized as shown below:
@Component({ selector: 'my-component', template: '<span *ngIf="person"> {{person.addresss.street}} </span>' }) class MyComponent { person?: Person; }
Using *ngIf
allows the TypeScript compiler to infer that the person
used in the binding expression will never be undefined
.
For more information about input type narrowing, see Input setter coercion and Improving template type checking for custom directives.
Use the non-null type assertion operator to suppress the Object is possibly 'undefined'
error when it is inconvenient to use *ngIf
or when some constraint in the component ensures that the expression is always non-null when the binding expression is interpolated.
In the following example, the person
and address
properties are always set together, implying that address
is always non-null if person
is non-null. There is no convenient way to describe this constraint to TypeScript and the template compiler, but the error is suppressed in the example by using address!.street
.
@Component({ selector: 'my-component', template: '<span *ngIf="person"> {{person.name}} lives on {{address!.street}} </span>' }) class MyComponent { person?: Person; address?: Address; setData(person: Person, address: Address) { this.person = person; this.address = address; } }
The non-null assertion operator should be used sparingly as refactoring of the component might break this constraint.
In this example it is recommended to include the checking of address
in the *ngIf
as shown below:
@Component({ selector: 'my-component', template: '<span *ngIf="person && address"> {{person.name}} lives on {{address.street}} </span>' }) class MyComponent { person?: Person; address?: Address; setData(person: Person, address: Address) { this.person = person; this.address = address; } }
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Licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution License 4.0.
https://v10.angular.io/guide/aot-compiler