Sharing Modules
Prerequisites
A basic understanding of the following:
- Feature Modules.
- JavaScript Modules vs. NgModules.
- Frequently Used Modules.
- Routing and Navigation.
- Lazy loading modules.
Creating shared modules allows you to organize and streamline your code. You can put commonly used directives, pipes, and components into one module and then import just that module wherever you need it in other parts of your app.
Consider the following module from an imaginary app:
- import { CommonModule } from '@angular/common';
- import { NgModule } from '@angular/core';
- import { FormsModule } from '@angular/forms';
- import { CustomerComponent } from './customer.component';
- import { NewItemDirective } from './new-item.directive';
- import { OrdersPipe } from './orders.pipe';
-
- @NgModule({
- imports: [ CommonModule ],
- declarations: [ CustomerComponent, NewItemDirective, OrdersPipe ],
- exports: [ CustomerComponent, NewItemDirective, OrdersPipe,
- CommonModule, FormsModule ]
- })
- export class SharedModule { }
Note the following:
- It imports the
CommonModule
because the module's component needs common directives. - It declares and exports the utility pipe, directive, and component classes.
- It re-exports the
CommonModule
andFormsModule
.
By re-exporting CommonModule
and FormsModule
, any other module that imports this
SharedModule
, gets access to directives like NgIf
and NgFor
from CommonModule
and can bind to component properties with [(ngModel)]
, a directive in the FormsModule
.
Even though the components declared by SharedModule
might not bind
with [(ngModel)]
and there may be no need for SharedModule
to import FormsModule
, SharedModule
can still export
FormsModule
without listing it among its imports
. This
way, you can give other modules access to FormsModule
without
having to import it directly into the @NgModule
decorator.
Using components vs services from other modules.
There is an important distinction between using another module's component and using a service from another module. Import modules when you want to use directives, pipes, and components. Importing a module with services means that you will have a new instance of that service, which typically is not what you need (typically one wants to reuse an existing service). Use module imports to control service instantiation.
The most common way to get a hold of shared services is through Angular dependency injection, rather than through the module system (importing a module will result in a new service instance, which is not a typical usage).
To read about sharing services, see Providers.
More on NgModules
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