Data binding automatically keeps your page up-to-date based on your application’s state. You use data binding to specify things such as the source of an image, the state of a button, or data for a particular user.
Data binding works with properties of DOM elements, components, and directives, not HTML attributes.
Table of Contents
HTML attributes and DOM properties
Angular binding distinguishes between HTML attributes and DOM properties. Attributes initialize DOM properties and you can configure them to modify an element’s behavior. Properties are features of DOM nodes.
- A few HTML attributes have 1:1 mapping to properties; for example,
id
. - Some HTML attributes don’t have corresponding properties; for example,
aria-*
. - Some DOM properties don’t have corresponding attributes; for example,
textContent
.
Remember that HTML attributes and DOM properties are different things, even when they have the same name.
Examples:
1. <input>
:
When the browser renders <input type="text" value="Singhak">
, it creates a corresponding DOM node with a value
property and initializes that value
to “Singhak”.
<input type="text" value="Singhak">
When the user enters “S
torywalla” into the <input>
, the DOM element value
property becomes “S
torywalla”. However, if you look at the HTML attribute value
using input.getAttribute('value')
, you can see that the attribute remains unchanged—it returns “Singhak”.
The HTML attribute value
specifies the initial value; the DOM value
property is the current value.
2. disabled button
A button’s disabled
property is false
by default so the button is enabled.
When you add the disabled
attribute, you are initializing the button’s disabled
property to true
which disables the button.
<button disabled>Test Button</button>
You cannot enable a button by writing <button disabled="false">Still Disabled</button>
. To control the state of the button, set the disabled
property instead.
Also Read: Angular: All about pipes template in angular
Property and attribute comparison:
Technically we can set the [attr.disabled]
attribute binding, the values are different in that the property binding must be a boolean value, while its corresponding attribute binding relies on whether the value is null
or not.
<button[disabled]="condition ? true : false">Disabled Attr</button> <button[attr.disabled]="condition ? 'disabled' : null">Disabled Prop</button>
Generally, use property binding over attribute binding as a boolean value is easy to read, the syntax is shorter, and a property is more performant.
Types of data binding:
Angular provides three categories of data binding according to the direction of data flow
:
- From the source to view
- From view to source
- In a two way sequence of view to source to view
Type: Interpolation, Property, Attribute, Class, Style
Category: One-way from data source to view target
Syntax:
{{expression}} [target]="expression" bind-target="expression"
Type: Event
Category: One-way from view target to data source
Syntax:
(target)="statement" on-target="statement"
Type: Two-way
Category: Two-way
Syntax:
[(target)]="expression" bindon-target="expression"
Also Read : Angular: Create custom pipe in Angular
The binding punctuation of []
, ()
, [()]
, and the prefix specify the direction of data flow.
- Use
[]
to bind from source to view. - Use
()
to bind from view to source. - Use
[()]
to bind in a two way sequence of view to source to view.
Binding types other than interpolation have a target name to the left of the equal sign. The target of a binding is a property or event, which you surround with square brackets, []
, parentheses, ()
, or both, [()]
.
When you write a data binding, you’re dealing exclusively with the DOM properties and events of the target object.
Reference: Angular – Binding syntax
Code: Singhak/AngularConcepts
FAQ
Data binding automatically keeps your page up-to-date based on your application’s state.
Angular provides three categories of data binding according to the direction of data flow
:
1. From the source to view
2. From view to source
2. In a two way sequence of view to source to view
Use [] to bind from source to view.
Use () to bind from view to the source.
Use [()] to bind in a two-way sequence of view to the source to view.