Concepts
NgModule

JavaScript modules vs. NgModules

JavaScript modules and NgModules can help you modularize your code, but they are very different. Angular applications rely on both kinds of modules.

JavaScript modules: Files exposing code

A JavaScript module is an individual file with JavaScript code, usually containing a class or a library of functions for a specific purpose within your application. JavaScript modules let you spread your work across multiple files.

HELPFUL: To learn more about JavaScript modules, see ES6 In Depth: Modules. For the module specification, see the 6th Edition of the ECMAScript standard.

To make the code in a JavaScript module available to other modules, use an export statement at the end of the relevant code in the module, such as the following:

      
export class AppComponent { … }

When you need that module's code in another module, use an import statement as follows:

      
import { AppComponent } from './app.component';

Each module has its own top-level scope. In other words, top-level variables and functions in a module are not seen in other scripts or modules.

NgModules: Classes with metadata for compiling

An NgModule is a class marked by the @NgModule decorator with a metadata object that describes how that particular part of the application fits together with the other parts. NgModules are specific to Angular. While classes with an @NgModule decorator are by convention kept in their own files, they differ from JavaScript modules because they include this metadata.

The @NgModule metadata plays an important role in guiding the Angular compilation process that converts the application code you write into highly performant JavaScript code. The metadata describes how to compile a component's template and how to create an injector at runtime. It identifies the NgModule's components, directives, and pipes"), and makes some of them public through the exports property so that external components can use them. You can also use an NgModule to add providers for services, so that the services are available elsewhere in your application.

Rather than defining all member classes in one giant file as a JavaScript module, declare which components, directives, and pipes belong to the NgModule in the @NgModule.declarations list. These classes are called declarables. An NgModule can export only the declarable classes it owns or imports from other NgModules. It doesn't declare or export any other kind of class. Declarables are the only classes that matter to the Angular compilation process.

For a complete description of the NgModule metadata properties, see Using the NgModule metadata.

An example that uses both

The root NgModule AppModule generated by the Angular CLI (when using the --no-standalone option) for a new application project demonstrates how you use both kinds of modules:

src/app/app.module.ts

      
import { BrowserModule } from '@angular/platform-browser';import { NgModule } from '@angular/core';import { AppComponent } from './app.component';@NgModule({  declarations: [AppComponent],  imports: [BrowserModule],  providers: [],  bootstrap: [AppComponent]})export class AppModule {}

The root NgModule starts with import statements to import JavaScript modules. It then configures the @NgModule with the following arrays:

  • declarations: The components, directives, and pipes that belong to the NgModule. A new application project's root NgModule has only one component, called AppComponent.

  • imports: Other NgModules you are using, so that you can use their declarables. The newly generated root NgModule imports BrowserModule in order to use browser-specific services such as DOM rendering, sanitization, and location.

  • providers: Providers of services that components in other NgModules can use. There are no providers in a newly generated root NgModule.

  • bootstrap: The component that Angular creates and inserts into the index.html host web page, thereby bootstrapping the application. This component, AppComponent, appears in both the declarations and the bootstrap arrays.

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