Template variables help you use data from one part of a template in another part of the template. With template variables, you can perform tasks such as respond to user input or finely tune your application's forms.
A template variable can refer to the following:
See the live example for a working example containing the code snippets in this guide.
In the template, you use the hash symbol, #
, to declare a template variable. The following template variable, #phone
, declares a phone
variable on an <input>
element.
<input #phone placeholder="phone number" />
You can refer to a template variable anywhere in the component's template. Here, a <button>
further down the template refers to the phone
variable.
<input #phone placeholder="phone number" /> <!-- lots of other elements --> <!-- phone refers to the input element; pass its `value` to an event handler --> <button (click)="callPhone(phone.value)">Call</button>
Angular assigns a template variable a value based on where you declare the variable:
<ng-template>
element, the variable refers to a TemplateRef
instance, which represents the template. For more information on <ng-template>
, see How Angular uses the asterisk, *
, syntax in Structural directives.#var="ngModel"
, the variable refers to the directive or component on the element with a matching exportAs
name. NgForm
with template variablesIn most cases, Angular sets the template variable's value to the element on which it occurs. In the previous example, phone
refers to the phone number <input>
. The button's click handler passes the <input>
value to the component's callPhone()
method.
The NgForm
directive demonstrates getting a reference to a different value by reference a directive's exportAs
name. In the following example, the template variable, itemForm
, appears three times separated by HTML.
<form #itemForm="ngForm" (ngSubmit)="onSubmit(itemForm)"> <label for="name">Name <input class="form-control" name="name" ngModel required /> </label> <button type="submit">Submit</button> </form> <div [hidden]="!itemForm.form.valid"> <p>{{ submitMessage }}</p> </div>
Without the ngForm
attribute value, the reference value of itemForm
would be the HTMLFormElement, <form>
. There is, however, a difference between a Component
and a Directive
in that Angular references a Component
without specifying the attribute value, and a Directive
does not change the implicit reference, or the element.
With NgForm
, itemForm
is a reference to the NgForm directive with the ability to track the value and validity of every control in the form.
Unlike the native <form>
element, the NgForm
directive has a form
property. The NgForm
form
property allows you to disable the submit button if the itemForm.form.valid
is invalid.
You can refer to a template variable anywhere within its surrounding template. Structural directives, such as *ngIf
and *ngFor
, or <ng-template>
act as a template boundary. You cannot access template variables outside of these boundaries.
Define a variable only once in the template so the runtime value remains predictable.
An inner template can access template variables that the outer template defines.
In the following example, changing the text in the <input>
changes the value in the <span>
because Angular immediately updates changes through the template variable, ref1
.
<input #ref1 type="text" [(ngModel)]="firstExample" /> <span *ngIf="true">Value: {{ ref1.value }}</span>
In this case, there is an implied <ng-template>
around the <span>
and the definition of the variable is outside of it. Accessing a template variable from the parent template works because the child template inherits the context from the parent template.
Rewriting the above code in a more verbose form explicitly shows the <ng-template>
.
<input #ref1 type="text" [(ngModel)]="firstExample" /> <!-- New template --> <ng-template [ngIf]="true"> <!-- Since the context is inherited, the value is available to the new template --> <span>Value: {{ ref1.value }}</span> </ng-template>
However, accessing a template variable from outside the parent template doesn't work.
<input *ngIf="true" #ref2 type="text" [(ngModel)]="secondExample" /> <span>Value: {{ ref2?.value }}</span> <!-- doesn't work -->
The verbose form shows that ref2
is outside the parent template.
<ng-template [ngIf]="true"> <!-- The reference is defined within a template --> <input #ref2 type="text" [(ngModel)]="secondExample" /> </ng-template> <!-- ref2 accessed from outside that template doesn't work --> <span>Value: {{ ref2?.value }}</span>
Consider the following example that uses *ngFor
.
<ng-container *ngFor="let i of [1,2]"> <input #ref type="text" [value]="i" /> </ng-container> {{ ref.value }}
Here, ref.value
doesn't work. The structural directive, *ngFor
instantiates the template twice because *ngFor
iterates over the two items in the array. It is impossible to define what the ref.value
reference signifies.
With structural directives, such as *ngFor
or *ngIf
, there is no way for Angular to know if a template is ever instantiated.
As a result, Angular isn't able to access the value and returns an error.
<ng-template>
When you declare the variable on an <ng-template>
, the variable refers to a TemplateRef
instance, which represents the template.
<ng-template #ref3></ng-template> <button (click)="log(ref3)">Log type of #ref</button>
In this example, clicking the button calls the log()
function, which outputs the value of #ref3
to the console. Because the #ref
variable is on an <ng-template>
, the value is TemplateRef
.
The following is the expanded browser console output of the TemplateRef()
function with the name of TemplateRef
.
▼ ƒ TemplateRef() name: "TemplateRef" __proto__: Function
A template input variable is a variable you can reference within a single instance of the template. You declare a template input variable using the let
keyword as in let hero
.
There are several such variables in this example: hero
, i
, and odd
.
The variable's scope is limited to a single instance of the repeated template. You can use the same variable name again in the definition of other structural directives.
In contrast, you declare a template variable by prefixing the variable name with #
, as in #var
. A template variable refers to its attached element, component, or directive.
Template input variables and template variables names have their own namespaces. The template input variable hero
in let hero
is distinct from the template variable hero
in #hero
.
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https://v11.angular.io/guide/template-reference-variables