1. What is Angular?
Angular is a TypeScript-based open-source framework for building web applications. It's maintained by Google and a community of developers.
2. Explain the difference between Angular and AngularJS.
Angular is a complete rewrite of AngularJS, introducing features like a component-based architecture, TypeScript support, and a more modular design.
3. How does an Angular application work?
Every Angular app consists of a file named angular.json. This file will contain all the configurations of the app. While building the app, the builder looks at this file to find the entry point of the application. Following is an image of the angular.json file:
"build": { "builder": "@angular-devkit/build-angular:browser", "options": { "outputPath": "dist/angular-starter", "index": "src/index.html", "main": "src/main.ts", "polyfills": "src/polyfills.ts", "tsConfig": "tsconfig.app.json", "aot": false, "assets": [ "src/favicon.ico", "src/assets" ], "styles": [ "./node_modules/@angular/material/prebuilt-themes/deeppurple-amber.css", "src/style.css" ] } }
Inside the build section, the main property of the options object defines the entry point of the application which in this case is main.ts.
The main.ts file creates a browser environment for the application to run, and, along with this, it also calls a function called bootstrapModule, which bootstraps the application. These two steps are performed in the following order inside the main.ts file:
import { platformBrowserDynamic } from \'@angular/platform-browser-dynamic\';
platformBrowserDynamic().bootstrapModule(AppModule)
In the above line of code, AppModule is getting bootstrapped.
The AppModule is declared in the app.module.ts file. This module contains declarations of all the components.
Below is an example of app.module.ts file:
import { BrowserModule } from \'@angular/platform-browser\'; import { NgModule } from \'@angular/core\'; import { AppComponent } from \'./app.component\'; @NgModule({ declarations: [ AppComponent ], imports: [ BrowserModule ], providers: [], entryComponents: [], bootstrap: [AppComponent] }) export class AppModule { }
As one can see in the above file, AppComponent is getting bootstrapped.
This component is defined in app.component.ts file. This file interacts with the webpage and serves data to it.
Below is an example of app.component.ts file:
import { Component } from \'@angular/core\'; @Component({ selector: \'app-root\', templateUrl: \'./app.component.html\', styleUrls: [\'./app.component.css\'] }) export class AppComponent { title = \'angular\'; }
Each component is declared with three properties:
- Selector - used for accessing the component
- Template/TemplateURL - contains HTML of the component
- StylesURL - contains component-specific stylesheets
After this, Angular calls the index.html file. This file consequently calls the root component that is app-root. The root component is defined in app.component.ts. This is how the index.html file looks:
<!doctype html> <html lang="en"> <head> <meta charset="utf-8"> <title>Angular</title> <base href="/"> <meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1"> </head> <body> <app-root></app-root> </body> </html>
The HTML template of the root component is displayed inside the <app-root>
tags.
This is how every angular application works.
4. How are Angular expressions different from JavaScript expressions?
The first and perhaps, the biggest difference is that Angular expressions allow us to write JavaScript in HTML which is not the case when it comes to JavaScript expressions.
Next, Angular expressions are evaluated against a local scope object whereas JavaScript expressions are against a global window object. Let\'s understand that better with an example :
Consider the following component named test:
import { Component, OnInit } from \'@angular/core\'; @Component({ selector: \'app-test\', template: ` <h4>{{message}}</h4> `, styleUrls: [\'./test.component.css\'] }) export class TestComponent implements OnInit { message:string = “Hello world”; constructor() { } ngOnInit() { } }
As one can see that Angular expression is used to display the message property of a component. Since we are using Angular expressions, in the present template, we cannot access a property outside of its local scope, which in this case is TestComponent.
This proves that Angular expressions are always evaluated based on the scope object rather than the global object.
The next difference is how Angular expressions handle null and undefined.
Consider the following JavaScript example:
<!DOCTYPE html> <html lang="en"> <head> <meta charset="UTF-8"> <meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1.0"> <title>JavaScript Test</title> </head> <body> <div id="foo"><div> </body> <script> \'use strict\'; let bar = {}; document.getElementById(\'foo\').innerHTML = bar.x; </script> </html>
If you run the above code, you will see undefined displayed on the screen. Although it’s not ideal to leave any property undefined, the user does not need to see this.
Now consider the following Angular example:
import { Component, OnInit } from \'@angular/core\'; @Component({ selector: \'app-new\', template: ` <h4>{{message}}</h4> `, styleUrls: [\'./new.component.css\'] }) export class NewComponent implements OnInit { message:object = {}; constructor() { } ngOnInit() { } }
If you render the above component, you will not see undefined being displayed on the screen.
Next, in Angular expressions, one cannot use loops, conditionals and exceptions.
The difference which makes Angular expressions quite beneficial is the use of pipes. Angular uses pipes(called filters in AngularJS), which can be used to format data before displaying it. Let’s see one predefined pipe in action:
import { Component, OnInit } from \'@angular/core\'; @Component({ selector: \'app-new\', template: ` <h4>{{message | lowercase}}</h4> `, styleUrls: [\'./new.component.css\'] }) export class NewComponent implements OnInit { message:string = "HELLO WORLD"; constructor() { } ngOnInit() { } }
In the above code, we have used a predefined pipe called lowercase, which transforms all the letters
in lowercase. Therefore, if you render the above component, you will see “hello world” being displayed.
In
contrast, JavaScript does not have the concept of pipes.
5. What are Single Page Applications (SPA)?
Single page applications are web based applications that only need to be loaded once, with new functionality consisting of only minor changes to the user interface. It does not load new HTML pages to display the content of the new page, but rather generates it dynamically. This is made feasible by JavaScript\'s ability to alter DOM components on the current page. A Single Page Application method is speedier, resulting in a more consistent user experience.
6. What are templates in Angular?
A template is a kind of HTML that instructs Angular about how to display a component. An Angular HTML template, like conventional HTML, produces a view, or user interface, in the browser, but with far more capabilities. Angular API evaluates an HTML template of a component, creates HTML, and renders it.
There are two ways to create a template in an Angular component:
- Inline Template
- Linked Template
Inline Template: The component decorator\'s template config is used to specify an inline HTML template for a component. The Template will be wrapped inside the single or double quotes.
Example:
@Component({ selector: "app-greet", template: `<div> <h1> Hello {{name}} how are you ? </h1> <h2> Welcome to interviewbit ! </h2> </div>`})
Linked Template: A component may include an HTML template in a separate HTML file. As illustrated below, the templateUrl option is used to indicate the path of the HTML template file.
Example:
@Component({ selector: "app-greet", templateUrl: "./component.html"})
7. What are directives in Angular?
A directive is a class in Angular that is declared with a @Directive decorator.
Every directive has its own behaviour and can be imported into various components of an application.
When to use a directive?
Consider an application, where multiple components need to have similar functionalities. The norm thing to do is by adding this functionality individually to every component but, this task is tedious to perform. In such a situation, one can create a directive having the required functionality and then, import the directive to components which require this functionality.
Types of directives:
1. Component directives
These form the main class in directives. Instead of @Directive decorator we use @Component decorator to declare these directives. These directives have a view, a stylesheet and a selector property.
2. Structural directives
- These directives are generally used to manipulate DOM elements.
- Every structural directive has a ‘ * ’ sign before them.
- We can apply these directives to any DOM element.
Let’s see some built-in structural directives in action:
<div *ngIf="isReady" class="display_name"> {{name}} </div><div class="details" *ngFor="let x of details" > <p>{{x.name}}</p> <p> {{x.address}}</p> <p>{{x.age}}</p> </div>
In the above example, we can *ngIf and *ngFor directives being used.
*ngIf is used to check a boolean value and if it’s truthy,the div element will be displayed.
*ngFor is used to iterate over a list and display each item of the list.
3. Attribute Directives
These directives are used to change the look and behaviour of a DOM element. Let’s understand attribute directives by creating one:
How to create a custom directive?
We’re going to create an attribute directive:
In the command terminal, navigate to the directory of the angular app and type the following command to generate a
directive: ng g directive blueBackground
The following directive will be generated. Manipulate the directive to look like this:
import { Directive, ElementRef } from \'@angular/core\'; @Directive({ selector: \'[appBlueBackground]\' }) export class BlueBackgroundDirective { constructor(el:ElementRef) { el.nativeElement.style.backgroundColor = "blue"; } }
Now we can apply the above directive to any DOM element: <p appBlueBackground>Hello World!</p>
8. Explain Components, Modules and Services in Angular
For better understanding, I would like you to create an Angular application by running the following inside the
command terminal: ng new angularApp
The above command will create an angular application in the directory.
Next, let\'s move on to understand Components, Modules, and Services.
- Components
In Angular, components are the basic building blocks, which control a part of the UI for any application.
A component is defined using the @Component decorator. Every component consists of three parts, the template which loads the view for the component, a stylesheet which defines the look and feel for the component, and a class that contains the business logic for the component.
For creating a component, inside the command terminal, navigate to the directory of the application created, and run
the following command: ng generate component test
Or ng g c test
One can see the generated component inside src/app/test folder. The component will be defined inside test.component.ts and this is how it looks:
import { Component, OnInit } from \'@angular/core\'; @Component({ selector: \'app-test\', templateUrl: \'./test.component.html\', styleUrls: [\'./test.component.css\'] }) export lass TestComponent implements OnInit { constructor() {} ngOnInit() { } }
As we can see in the above image, our component is defined with @Component decorator.
- Modules
A module is a place where we can group components, directives, services, and pipes. Module decides whether the components, directives, etc can be used by other modules, by exporting or hiding these elements. Every module is defined with a @NgModule decorator.
By default, modules are of two types:
- Root Module
- Feature Module
Every application can have only one root module whereas, it can have one or more feature modules.
A root module imports BrowserModule, whereas a feature module imports CommonModule.
In the application that we created before, one can see that the root module is defined inside app.module.ts and this is how it looks:
import { BrowserModule } from \'@angular/platform-browser\'; import { NgModule } from \'@angular/core\'; import { AppComponent } from \'./app.component\'; import { TestComponent } from \'./test/text.component\'; @NgModule({ declarations: [ AppComponent, TestComponent ], imports: [ BrowserModule ], providers: [], bootstrap: [AppComponent] }) export class AppModule { }
We can see in the above image that the component we created earlier is already imported in the declarations array.
To create a feature module, run the following command: ng g m test-module
The module is created inside the src/app/test-module/test-module.module.ts file:
import { NgModule } from \'@angular/core\'; import { CommonModule } from \'@angular/common\'; @NgModule({ declarations: [], imports: [ CommonModule ] }) export class TestModuleModule { }
As one can see, CommonModule is imported since this is a feature module.
- Services
Services are objects which get instantiated only once during the lifetime of an application. The main objective of a service is to share data, functions with different components of an Angular application.
A service is defined using a @Injectable decorator. A function defined inside a service can be invoked from any component or directive.
To create a service, run the following command: ng g s test-service
The service will be created inside src/app/test-service.service.ts:
import { Injectable } from \'@angular/core\'; @Injectable({ providedIn: \'root\' }) export class TestServiceService { constructor() { } }
Any method/function defined inside the TestServiceService class can be directly used inside any component by just importing the service.
9. What is the scope?
In Angular, a scope is an object that refers to the application model. It is a context in which expressions can be executed. These scopes are grouped hierarchically, comparable to the DOM structure of the application. A scope aids in the propagation of various events and the monitoring of expressions.
10. What is data binding in Angular?
Data binding is one of the most significant and effective elements for creating communication between the DOM and the component. It makes designing interactive apps easier by reducing the need to worry about data pushing and pulling between the component and the template.
There are Four types of Data binding in Angular:
- Property Binding
- Event Binding
- String Interpolation
- Two way data binding
Property Binding: One method of data binding is called property binding. In property binding, we connect a DOM element\'s property to a field that is a declared property in our TypeScript component code. In reality, Angular transforms string interpolation into property binding internally.
Event Binding: Using event binding, you may respond to DOM events like button clicks and mouse movements. When a DOM event (such as a click, change, or keyup) occurs, the component\'s designated method is called.
String Interpolation: In order to export data from TypeScript code to an HTML template( view ), String Interpolation is a one way data binding approach. The data from the component is shown to the view using the template expression enclosed in double curly braces. The value of a component property is added by using string interpolation.
11. What are Decorators and their types in Angular?
Decorators are a fundamental concept in TypeScript, and because Angular heavily relies on TypeScript, decorators have become an important element of Angular as well.
Decorators are methods or design patterns that are labeled with a prefixed @ symbol and preceded by a class, method, or property. They enable the modification of a service, directive, or filter before it is utilized. A decorator, in essence, provides configuration metadata that specifies how a component, class, or method should be processed, constructed, and used at runtime. Angular includes a number of decorators which attach various types of metadata to classes, allowing the system to understand what all these classes signify and how they should function.
Types of decorators:
- Method Decorator: Method decorators, as the name implies, are used to add functionality to the methods defined within our class.
- Class Decorator: Class Decorators are the highest-level decorators that determine the purpose of the classes. They indicate to Angular that a specific class is a component or module. And the decorator enables us to declare this effect without having to write any code within the class.
- Parameter Decorator: The arguments of your class constructors are decorated using parameter decorators.
- Property Decorator: These are the second most popular types of decorators. They enable us to enhance some of the properties in our classes.
12. What are annotations in Angular ?
These are language features that are hard-coded. Annotations are merely metadata that is set on a class to reflect the metadata library. When a user annotates a class, the compiler adds an annotations property to the class, saves an annotation array in it, and then attempts to instantiate an object with the same name as the annotation, providing the metadata into the constructor. Annotations in AngularJs are not predefined, therefore we can name them ourselves.
13. What are pure Pipes?
These are pipelines that only employ pure functions. As a result, a pure pipe does not employ any internal state, and the output remains constant as long as the parameters provided remain constant. Angular calls the pipe only when the parameters being provided change. A single instance of the pure pipe is utilized in all components.
14. What are impure pipes?
Angular calls an impure pipe for each change detection cycle, independent of the change in the input fields. For each of these pipes, several pipe instances are produced. These pipes\' inputs can be altered.
By default, all pipelines are pure. However, as demonstrated below, you can specify impure pipes using the pure property.
Example:
@Pipe({ name: \'impurePipe\', pure: false/true })export class ImpurePipe {}
15. What is Pipe transform Interface in Angular?
An interface used by pipes to accomplish a transformation. Angular calls the transform function with the value of a binding as the first argument and any arguments as the second parameter in list form. This interface is used to implement custom pipes.
Example:
import { Pipe, PipeTransform } from \'@angular/core\'; @Pipe({ name: \'tranformpipe\'})export class TranformpipePipe implements PipeTransform { transform(value: unknown, ...args: unknown[]): unknown { return null; }}
17. Create a TypeScript class with a constructor and a function.
class IB { name: string; constructor(message: string) { this.name = message; } greet() { return "Hello, " + this.name + "How are you"; } } let msg = new IB("IB");
18. Angular by default, uses client-side rendering for its applications.
Can one make an angular application to render on the server-side?
Yes, angular provides a technology called Angular Universal, which can be used to render applications on the server-side.
The advantages of using Angular Universal are:
- First time users can instantly see a view of the application. This benefits in providing better user experience.
- Many search engines expect pages in plain HTML, thus, Universal can make sure that your content is available on every search engine, which leads to better SEO.
- Any server-side rendered application loads faster since rendered pages are available to the browser sooner.
19. What is Eager and Lazy loading?
- Loading: The eager loading technique is the default module-loading strategy. Eager loading feature modules are loaded before the program begins. This is primarily utilized for small-scale applications.
- Lazy Loading: Lazy loading loads the feature modules dynamically as needed. This speeds up the application. It is utilized for larger projects where all of the modules are not required at the start.
20. What is view encapsulation in Angular?
View encapsulation specifies if the component\'s template and styles can impact the entire program or vice versa.
Angular offers three encapsulation methods:
- Native: The component does not inherit styles from the main HTML. Styles defined in this component\'s @Component decorator are only applicable to this component.
- Emulated (Default): The component inherits styles from the main HTML. Styles set in the @Component decorator are only applicable to this component.
- None: The component\'s styles are propagated back to the main HTML and therefore accessible to all components on the page. Be wary of programs that have None and Native components. Styles will be repeated in all components with Native encapsulation if they have No encapsulation.
21. Explain string interpolation and property binding in Angular.
- String interpolation and property binding are parts of data-binding in Angular.
- Data-binding is a feature in angular, which provides a way to communicate between the component(Model) and its view(HTML template).
- Data-binding can be done in two ways, one-way binding and two-way binding.
- In Angular, data from the component can be inserted inside the HTML template. In one-way binding, any changes in the component will directly reflect inside the HTML template but, vice-versa is not possible. Whereas, it is possible in two-way binding.
- String interpolation and property binding allow only one-way data binding.
- String interpolation uses the double curly braces {{ }} to display data from the component. Angular automatically runs the expression written inside the curly braces, for example, {{ 2 + 2 }} will be evaluated by Angular and the output 4, will be displayed inside the HTML template. Using property binding, we can bind the DOM properties of an HTML element to a component\'s property. Property binding uses the square brackets [ ] syntax.
22. How are observables different from promises?
The first difference is that an Observable is lazy whereas a Promise is eager.
Promise | Observable |
---|---|
Emits a single value | Emits multiple values over a period of time |
Not Lazy | Lazy. An observable is not called until we subscribe to the observable |
Cannot be cancelled | Can be cancelled by using the unsubscribe() method |
Observable provides operators like map, forEach, filter, reduce, retry, retryWhen etc. |
Consider the following Observable:
const observable = rxjs.Observable.create(observer => { console.log(\'Text inside an observable\'); observer.next(\'Hello world!\'); observer.complete(); }); console.log(\'Before subscribing an Observable\'); observable.subscribe((message)=> console.log(message));
When you run the above Observable, you can see messages being displayed in the following order:
Before subscribing an ObservableText inside an observableHello world!
As you can see, observables are lazy. Observable runs only when someone subscribes to them hence, the message “Before subscribing…” is displayed ahead of the message inside the observable.
Now let’s consider a Promise:
const promise = new Promise((resolve, reject) => { console.log(\'Text inside promise\'); resolve(\'Hello world!\'); }); console.log(\'Before calling then method on Promise\'); greetingPoster.then(message => console.log(message));
Running the above promise, the messages will be displayed in the following order:
Text inside promiseBefore calling then method on PromiseHello world!
As you can see the message inside Promise is displayed first. This means that a promise runs before the then method is called. Therefore, promises are eager.
The next difference is that Promises are always asynchronous. Even when the promise is immediately resolved. Whereas an Observable, can be both synchronous and asynchronous.
The above example of an observable is the case to show that an observable is synchronous. Let’s see the case where an observable can be asynchronous:
const observable = rxjs.Observable.create(observer => { setTimeout(()=>{ observer.next(\'Hello world\'); observer.complete(); },3000) }); console.log(\'Before calling subscribe on an Observable\'); observable.subscribe((data)=> console.log(data)); console.log(\'After calling subscribe on an Observable\');
The messages will be displayed in the following order:
Before calling subscribe on an ObservableAfter calling subscribe on an ObservableHello world!
You can see in this case, observable runs asynchronously.
The next difference is that Observables can emit multiple values whereas Promises can emit only one value.
The biggest feature of using observables is the use of operators. We can use multiple operators on an observable whereas, there is no such feature in a promise.
23. What exactly is a parameterized pipe?
To fine-tune its output, a pipe can receive any number of optional parameters. The parameterized pipe is constructed by first stating the pipe name followed by a colon (:) and then the parameter value. If the pipe supports several arguments, use colons to separate the values.
Example: Let\'s look at a birthday with a certain format (dd/MM/yyyy):
import { Component } from \'@angular/core\'; @Component({ selector: \'app-example\', template: `<p>Birthday is {{ birthday | date:\'dd/MM/yyyy\'}}</p>` }) export class ExampleComponent { birthday = new Date(2000, 7, 15); }
24. What are class decorators?
Class Decorators are the highest-level decorators that determine the purpose of the classes. They indicate to Angular that a specific class is a component or module. And the decorator enables us to declare this effect without having to write any code within the class.
Example:
import { NgModule, Component } from \'@angular/core\'; @Component({ selector: \'class-component\', template: \'<div> This is a class component ! </div>\', }) export class ClassComponent { constructor() { console.log(\'This is a class component!\'); } } @NgModule({ imports: [], declarations: [], }) export class ClassModule { constructor() { console.log(\'This is a class module!\'); } }
It is a component or module in which no code in the class is required to tell Angular. We only need to design it, and Angular will take care of the rest.
25. What are Method decorators?
Method decorators, as the name implies, are used to add functionality to the methods defined within our class.
Example: @HostListener, is a good example of method decorators.
import { Component, HostListener } from \'@angular/core\'; @Component({ selector: \'method-component\', template: \'<div> This is a test method component ! </div>\', }) export class MethodComponent { @HostListener(\'click\', [\'$event\']) onHostClick(event: Event) { console.log(\'clicked now this event is available !\'); }}
The @HostListener decorator is used before the onHostClick () method in the above example code.
26. What are property decorators?
These are the second most popular types of decorators. They enable us to enhance some of the properties in our classes. We can certainly understand why we utilize any certain class property by using a property decorator.
There are many property decorators available for example @Input(), @Output, @ReadOnly(), @Override()
Example:
import { Component, Input } from \'@angular/core\'; @Component({ selector: \'prop-component\', template: \'<div> This is a test component ! </div>\' }) export class PropComponent { @Input() exampleProperty: string; }
The input binding would be sent via a component property binding:
<prop-component [propProperty]="propData"> </prop-component>
27. What is the Component Decorator in Angular?
TypeScript classes are used to create components. This class genre is then decorated with the "@Component" decorator. The decorator\'s function is to take a metadata object holding component information and decorate it.
A Decorator is always preceded by @. The Decorator must come before the class definition. We can also make our own decorators.
Example: The example below shows us a Class decorated with the @Component decorator.
import {Component} from \'@angular/core\';@Component({ selector: \'app-root\', templateUrl: \'./app.component.html\', styleUrls: [\'./app.component.css\']})export class AppComponent { title = \'Example component\';}
The metadata object received by the decorator has values such as templateUrl, selector, and others, with the templateUrL property pointing to an HTML file that defines what you see on the application.
28. What are router links?
RouterLink is an anchor tag directive that gives the router authority over those elements. Because the navigation routes are set.
Example: As seen below, you may pass string values to the router-link directive.
<h1>Example of an Angular Router</h1><nav> <a routerLink="/home" >Home Page of our website</a> <a routerLink="/about-us" >About us</a></nav><router-outlet></router-outlet>
29. What exactly is the router state?
RouterState is a route tree. This tree\'s nodes are aware of the "consumed" URL segments, retrieved arguments, and processed data. You may use the Router service and the routerState property to get the current RouterState from anywhere in the application.
Example:
@Component({templateUrl:\'example.html\'})class MyComponent { constructor(router: Router) { const state: RouterState = router.routerState; const root: ActivatedRoute = state.root; const child = root.firstChild; const id: Observable<string> = child.params.map(p => p.id); //... }}
30. What does Angular Material means?
Angular Material is a user interface component package that enables professionals to create a uniform, appealing, and fully functioning websites, web pages, and web apps. It does this by adhering to contemporary web design concepts such as gentle degradation and browser probability.
31. What is ngOnInit?
ngOnInit is a lifecycle hook and callback function used by Angular to mark the creation of a component. It accepts no arguments and returns a void type.
Example:
export class MyComponent implements OnInit {constructor() { } ngOnInit(): void { //.... }}
32. What is transpiling in Angular ?
Transpiling is the process of transforming the source code of one programming language into the source code of another. Typically, in Angular, this implies translating TypeScript to JavaScript. TypeScript (or another language like as Dart) can be used to develop code for your Angular application, which is subsequently transpiled to JavaScript. This occurs naturally and internally.
33. What is Change Detection, and how does the Change Detection Mechanism work?
The process of synchronizing a model with a view is known as Change Detection. Even when utilizing the ng Model to implement two-way binding, which is syntactic sugar on top of a unidirectional flow. Change detection is incredibly fast, but as an app\'s complexity and the number of components increase, change detection will have to do more and more work.
Change Detection Mechanism-moves only ahead and never backward, beginning with the root component and ending with the last component. This is what one-way data flow entails. The tree of components is the architecture of an Angular application. Each component is a child, but the child is not a parent. A $digest loop is no longer required with the one-way flow.
34. How do you choose an element from a component template?
To directly access items in the view, use the @ViewChild directive. Consider an input item with a reference.
<input #example>
and construct a view child directive that is accessed in the ngAfterViewInit lifecycle hook
@ViewChild(\'example\') input;ngAfterViewInit() { console.log(this.input.nativeElement.value);}
35. How do you deal with errors in observables?
Instead of depending on try/catch, which is useless in an asynchronous context, you may manage problems by setting an error callback on the observer.
Example: You may create an error callback as shown below.
myObservable.subscribe({ next(number) { console.log(\'Next number: \' + number)}, error(err) { console.log(\'An error received \' + err)} });
36. How can I include SASS into an Angular project?
You may use the ng new command while building your project using angular CLI. All of your components are generated using preset sass files.
ng new <Your_Project_Name> --style = sass
If you want to change the style of your project, use the ng set command.
ng set defaults.styleExt scss