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Angular Projects - Third Edition

By Aristeidis Bampakos
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  1. Free Chapter
    Building an SPA Application with Scully and Angular Router
About this book
Angular Projects isn't like other books on Angular – this is a project-based guide that helps budding Angular developers get hands-on experience while developing cutting-edge applications. In this updated third edition, you’ll master the essential features of the framework by creating ten different real-world web applications. Each application will demonstrate how to integrate Angular with a different library and tool, giving you a 360-degree view of what the Angular ecosystem makes possible. Updated to the newest version of Angular, the book has been revamped to keep up with the latest technologies. You’ll work on a PWA weather application, a mobile photo geotagging application, a component UI library, and other exciting projects. In doing so, you’ll implement popular technologies such as Angular Router, Scully, Electron, Angular service workers, Jamstack, NgRx, and more. By the end of this book, you will have the skills you need to build Angular apps using a variety of different technologies according to your or your client’s needs.
Publication date:
July 2023
Publisher
Packt
Pages
312
ISBN
9781803239118

 

Building an SPA Application with Scully and Angular Router

Angular applications follow the Single-Page Application (SPA) architecture, where different views of the web page can be activated using the URL in the browser. Any changes to that URL can be intercepted by the Angular router and translated to routes that can activate a particular Angular component.

Scully is a popular static website generator that is based on the Jamstack architecture. It can cooperate nicely with the Angular router to prerender the content of an Angular application according to each route.

In this chapter, we are going to combine Angular and Scully to create a personal blog. The following topics are going to be covered:

  • Setting up routing in an Angular application
  • Creating the basic layout of our blog
  • Configuring routing for our application
  • Adding blog capabilities with Scully
  • Displaying blog posts on the home page
 

Essential background theory and context

In the old days of web development, client-side applications were highly coupled with the underlying server infrastructure. Much machinery was involved when we wanted to visit the page of a website using a URL.

The browser would send the requested URL to the server, and the server should respond with a matching HTML file for that URL. This was a complicated process that would result in delays and varying round-trip times.

Modern web applications eliminate these problems using the SPA architecture. A client needs to request a single HTML file only once from the server. Any subsequent changes to the URL of the browser are handled internally by the client infrastructure. In Angular, the router is responsible for intercepting in-app URL requests and handling them according to a defined route configuration.

Jamstack is a hot emerging technology that allows us to create fast and secure web applications. It can be used for any application type, ranging from an e-commerce website to a Software as a Service (SaaS) web application or even a personal blog. The architecture of Jamstack is based on the following pillars:

  • Performance: Pages are generated and prerendered during production, eliminating the need to wait for content to load.
  • Scaling: Content is static files that can be served from anywhere, even from a Content Delivery Network (CDN) provider that improves the performance of the application.
  • Security: The serverless nature of server-side processes and the fact that content is already static eliminates potential attacks that target server infrastructures.

Scully is the first static website generator for Angular that embraces the Jamstack approach. It essentially generates pages of the Angular application during build time to be immediately available when requested.

 

Project overview

In this project, we will build a personal blog using the Angular framework and enhance it with Jamstack characteristics using the Scully site generator. Initially, we will scaffold a new Angular application and enable it for routing. We will then create the basic layout of our application by adding some barebones components. As soon as we have a working Angular application, we will add blog support to it using Scully. We will then create some blog posts using Markdown files and display them on the home page of our application. The following diagram depicts an architectural overview of the project:

Εικόνα που περιέχει κείμενο, διάγραμμα, σκίτσο/σχέδιο, γραμμή  Περιγραφή που δημιουργήθηκε αυτόματα

Figure 2.1 – Project architecture

Build time: 1 hour.

 

Getting started

The following software tools are required to complete this project:

 

Setting up routing in an Angular application

We will kick off our project by creating a new Angular application from scratch. Execute the following Angular CLI command in a terminal window to create a new Angular application:

ng new my-blog --routing --style=scss

We use the ng new command to create a new Angular application, passing the following options:

  • my-blog: The name of the Angular application that we want to create. The Angular CLI will create a my-blog folder in the path where we execute the command.

    Every command that we run in the terminal window should be run inside this folder.

  • --routing: Enables routing in the Angular application.
  • --style=scss: Configures the Angular application to use the SCSS stylesheet format when working with CSS styles.

When we enable routing in an Angular application, the Angular CLI imports several artifacts from the @angular/router npm package in our application:

  • It creates the app-routing.module.ts file, which is the main routing module of our application:
    import { NgModule } from '@angular/core';
    import { RouterModule, Routes } from '@angular/router';
    const routes: Routes = [];
    @NgModule({
      imports: [RouterModule.forRoot(routes)],
      exports: [RouterModule]
    })
    export class AppRoutingModule { }
    
  • It imports AppRoutingModule into the main module of our application, app.module.ts:
    import { NgModule } from '@angular/core';
    import { BrowserModule } from '@angular/platform-browser';
    import { AppRoutingModule } from './app-routing.module';
    import { AppComponent } from './app.component';
    @NgModule({
      declarations: [
        AppComponent
      ],
      imports: [
        BrowserModule,
        AppRoutingModule
      ],
      providers: [],
      bootstrap: [AppComponent]
    })
    export class AppModule { }
    

We configured our application to use the SCSS stylesheet format. Instead of creating the styles of our application manually, we will use the Bootstrap CSS library:

  1. Execute the following command in a terminal window to install Bootstrap:
    npm install bootstrap
    

    In the preceding command, we use the npm executable to install the bootstrap package from the npm registry.

  1. Add the following import statement at the top of the styles.scss file that exists in the src folder of our Angular application:
    @import "bootstrap/scss/bootstrap";
    

The styles.scss file contains CSS styles that are applied globally in our application. In the previous snippet, we import all the styles from the Bootstrap library into our application. The @import CSS rule accepts the absolute path of the bootstrap.scss file as an option without adding the extension.

In the following section, we will learn how to create the basic layout of our blog by creating components, such as the header and the footer.

 

Creating the basic layout of our blog

A blog typically has a header containing all the primary website links and a footer containing copyright information and other useful links. In the world of Angular, both can be represented as separate components.

The header component is used only once since it is added when our application starts up, and it is always rendered as the main menu of the website. In Angular, we typically create a module, named core by convention, to keep such components or services central to our application. To create the module, we use the generate command of the Angular CLI:

ng generate module core

The preceding command will create the module in the src\app\core folder of our application. To create the header component, we will use the same command, passing a different set of options:

ng generate component header --path=src/app/core --module=core --export

The previous command will create all necessary component files inside the src\app\core\header folder. It will also declare HeaderComponent in the core.module.ts file and add it to the exports property so that other modules can use it:

import { NgModule } from '@angular/core';
import { CommonModule } from '@angular/common';
import { HeaderComponent } from './header/header.component';
@NgModule({
  declarations: [
    HeaderComponent
  ],
  imports: [
    CommonModule
  ],
  exports: [
    HeaderComponent
  ]
})
export class CoreModule { }

The header component should display the main links of our blog. Open the header.component.html template file of the header component and replace its content with the following snippet:

<nav class="navbar navbar-expand navbar-light bg-light">
  <div class="container-fluid">
    <a class="navbar-brand">Angular Projects</a>
    <ul class="navbar-nav me-auto">
      <li class="nav-item">
        <a class="nav-link">Articles</a>
      </li>
      <li class="nav-item">
        <a class="nav-link">Contact</a>
      </li>
    </ul>
  </div>
</nav>

The footer component can be used more than once in an Angular application. Currently, we want to display it on the main page of our application. In the future, we may want to have it also on a login page that will be available for blog visitors. In such a case, the footer component should be reusable. When we want to group components that will be reused throughout our application, we typically create a module named shared by convention. Use the Angular CLI generate command to create the module:

ng generate module shared

The previous command will create the shared module in the src\app\shared folder. The footer component can now be created using the following command:

ng generate component footer --path=src/app/shared --module=shared --export

The previous command will create all necessary files of the footer component inside the src\app\shared\footer folder. It will also add FooterComponent in the declarations and exports properties in the shared.module.ts file:

import { NgModule } from '@angular/core';
import { CommonModule } from '@angular/common';
import { FooterComponent } from './footer/footer.component';
@NgModule({
  declarations: [
    FooterComponent
  ],
  imports: [
    CommonModule
  ],
  exports: [
    FooterComponent
  ]
})
export class SharedModule { }

The content of the footer component should contain copyright information about our blog.

Let’s see how to add this information to our component:

  1. Open the footer.component.ts file, add a currentDate property in the FooterComponent class, and initialize it to a new Date object:
    currentDate = new Date();
    
  2. Open the footer.component.html template file of the footer component and replace its content with the following:
    <nav class="navbar fixed-bottom navbar-light bg-light">
      <div class="container-fluid">
        <p>Copyright @{{currentDate | date: 'y'}}. All
          Rights Reserved</p>
      </div>
    </nav>
    

The preceding code uses interpolation to display the value of the currentDate property on the screen. It also uses the built-in date pipe to display only the year of the current date.

Pipes are a built-in feature of the Angular framework that apply transformations on the view representation of a component property. The underlying value of the property remains intact.

We have already created the essential components of our blog. Now it is time to display them on the screen:

  1. Open the main module of the application, the app.module.ts file, and add CoreModule and SharedModule into the imports property of the @NgModule decorator:
    @NgModule({
      declarations: [
        AppComponent
      ],
      imports: [
        BrowserModule,
        AppRoutingModule,
        CoreModule,
        SharedModule
      ],
      providers: [],
      bootstrap: [AppComponent]
    })
    
  2. Add the appropriate import statements at the top of the file for each module:
    import { CoreModule } from './core/core.module';
    import { SharedModule } from './shared/shared.module';
    
  3. Open the app.component.html template file of the main component and replace its content with the following HTML snippet:
    <app-header></app-header>
    <app-footer></app-footer>
    

We added the header and the footer component in the preceding snippet by using their CSS selectors.

If we run the serve command of the Angular CLI to preview the application, we should get the following:

Figure 2.2 – Basic layout

Figure 2.2 – Basic layout

We have already completed the basic layout of our blog application, and it looks great! But the header contains two additional links that we have not covered yet. We will learn how to use routing to activate those links in the following section.

 

Configuring routing for our application

The header component that we created in the previous section contains two links:

  • Articles: Displays a list of blog articles
  • Contact: Displays personal information about the blog owner

The previous links will also become the main features of our application. So, we need to create an Angular module for each one.

When you design your website and need to decide upon the Angular modules that you will use, check out the main menu of the website. Each link of the menu should be a different feature and, thus, a different Angular module.

By convention, Angular modules that contain functionality for a specific feature are called feature modules.

Creating the contact page

Let’s begin by creating our contact feature:

  1. Create a module that will be the home for our contact feature:
    ng generate module contact
    
  2. Create a component that will be the main component of the contact module:
    ng generate component contact --path=src/app/contact --module=contact --export --flat
    

    We pass the --flat option to the generate command so that the Angular CLI will not create a separate folder for our component, as in previous cases. The contact component will be the only component in our module, so there is no point in having it separately.

  1. Open the contact.component.html file and add the following HTML content:
    <div class="card mx-auto text-center border-light" style="width: 18rem;">
      <img src="assets/angular.png" class="card-img-top"
        alt="Angular logo">
      <div class="card-body">
        <h5 class="card-title">Angular Projects</h5>
        <p class="card-text">
          A personal blog created with the Angular
          framework and the Scully static site generator
        </p>
        <a href="https://angular.io/" target="_blank"
          class="card-link">Angular</a>
        <a href="https://scully.io/" target="_blank"
          class="card-link">Scully</a>
      </div>
    </div>
    

In the preceding code, we used the angular.png image, which you can find in the src\assets folder of the project from the accompanying GitHub repository.

The assets folder in an Angular CLI project is used for static content such as images, fonts, or JSON files.

We have already created our contact feature. The next step is to add it to the main page of our Angular application:

  1. Open the app-routing.module.ts file and add a new route configuration object in the routes property:
    import { NgModule } from '@angular/core';
    import { RouterModule, Routes } from '@angular/router';
    import { ContactComponent } from './contact/contact.component';
    const routes: Routes = [
      { path: 'contact', component: ContactComponent }
    ];
    @NgModule({
      imports: [RouterModule.forRoot(routes)],
      exports: [RouterModule]
    })
    export class AppRoutingModule { }
    

    The preceding code indicates that when the URL of the browser points to the contact path, our application will activate and display ContactComponent on the screen. The routes property of a routing module contains the routing configuration of the respective feature module. It is an array of route configuration objects where each one defines the component class and the URL path that activates it.

  1. Add ContactModule in the imports array of the @NgModule decorator of AppModule to be able to use it:
    @NgModule({
      declarations: [
        AppComponent
      ],
      imports: [
        BrowserModule,
        AppRoutingModule,
        CoreModule,
        SharedModule,
        ContactModule
      ],
      providers: [],
      bootstrap: [AppComponent]
    })
    

    Do not forget to add the respective import statement for ContactModule at the top of the file.

  1. Routed components, just like ContactComponent, need a place where they can be loaded. Open the app.component.html file and add the <router-outlet> directive:
    <app-header></app-header>
    <div class="container">
      <router-outlet></router-outlet>
    </div>
    <app-footer></app-footer>
    

Now, we need to wire up the route configuration that we created with the actual link on the header component:

  1. Open the header.component.html file and add the routerLink directive to the respective anchor HTML element:
    <li class="nav-item">
      <a routerLink="/contact" routerLinkActive="active"
        class="nav-link">Contact</a>
    </li>
    

In the preceding snippet, the routerLink directive points to the path property of the route configuration object. We have also added the routerLinkActive directive, which sets the active class on the anchor element when the specific route is activated.

Notice that the value of the routerLink directive contains a leading /, whereas the path property of the route configuration object that we defined does not. According to the case, omitting the / would give a different meaning to the route.

  1. The routerLink and routerLinkActive directives are part of the Angular Router package. We need to import RouterModule in the core.module.ts file to use them:
    import { NgModule } from '@angular/core';
    import { CommonModule } from '@angular/common';
    import { HeaderComponent } from './header/header.component';
    import { RouterModule } from '@angular/router';
    @NgModule({
      declarations: [
        HeaderComponent
      ],
      imports: [
        CommonModule,
        RouterModule
      ],
      exports: [
        HeaderComponent
      ]
    })
    export class CoreModule { }
    

We are now ready to preview our new contact page! If we run the application using ng serve and click on the Contact link, we should see the following output:

Εικόνα που περιέχει κείμενο, λογότυπο, γραμματοσειρά, στιγμιότυπο οθόνης  Περιγραφή που δημιουργήθηκε αυτόματα

Figure 2.3 – Contact page

In the following section, we will build the functionality for the Articles link of the header in our blog.

Adding the articles page

The feature that is responsible for displaying articles in our blog will be the articles module. It will also be the module that connects the dots between Angular and Scully. We will use the generate command of the Angular CLI to create that module:

ng generate module articles --route=articles --module=app-routing

In the previous command, we pass some additional routing options:

  • --route: Defines the URL path of our feature
  • --module: Indicates the routing module that will define the route configuration object that activates our feature

The Angular CLI performs additional actions, instead of just creating the module, upon executing the command:

  • It creates a routed component in the src\app\articles folder that will be activated by default from a route navigation object. It is the landing page of our feature, and it will display a list of blog posts, as we will see in the Displaying blog data on the home page section.
  • It creates a routing module named articles-routing.module.ts that contains the routing configuration of our module.
  • It adds a new route configuration object in the route configuration of the main application module that activates our module.

The articles-routing.module.ts file contains the routing configuration for the articles module:

import { NgModule } from '@angular/core';
import { RouterModule, Routes } from '@angular/router';
import { ArticlesComponent } from './articles.component';
const routes: Routes = [{ path: '', component: ArticlesComponent }];
@NgModule({
  imports: [RouterModule.forChild(routes)],
  exports: [RouterModule]
})
export class ArticlesRoutingModule { }

It imports RouterModule using the forChild method to pass the routing configuration to the Angular router. If we take a look at the main routing module of the application, we will see that it follows a slightly different approach:

app-routing.module.ts

import { NgModule } from '@angular/core';
import { RouterModule, Routes } from '@angular/router';
import { ContactComponent } from './contact/contact.component';
const routes: Routes = [
  { path: 'contact', component: ContactComponent },
  { path: 'articles', loadChildren: () => import('./articles/articles.module').then(m => m.ArticlesModule) }
];
@NgModule({
  imports: [RouterModule.forRoot(routes)],
  exports: [RouterModule]
})
export class AppRoutingModule { }

The forChild method is used in feature modules, whereas the forRoot method should be used only in the main application module.

The route configuration of the articles module contains only one route that activates ArticlesComponent. The path of the route is set to an empty string to indicate that it is the default route of the routing module. It essentially means that ArticlesComponent will be activated whenever that module is loaded. But how is the articles module loaded in our application?

The second route of the main routing module contains a route configuration object that does not activate a component but rather a module. It uses the loadChildren method to load ArticlesModule dynamically when navigation triggers the articles path.

The import function in the loadChildren property accepts the relative path of the TypeScript module file without the extension.

The previous approach is called lazy loading and improves the startup and the overall performance of an Angular application. It creates a separate bundle for each lazy-loaded module, which is loaded upon request, reducing the final bundle size and the memory consumption of your application. Let’s wire up the new route to our header component:

  1. Open the header.component.html file and add the following routerLink and routerLinkActive directives to the Articles anchor HTML element:
    <li class="nav-item">
      <a routerLink="/articles" routerLinkActive="active"
        class="nav-link">Articles</a>
    </li>
    
  2. Run ng serve and use your favorite browser to preview your application.
  3. Open the developer tools of your browser, click on the Articles link, and inspect the Network tab:
Εικόνα που περιέχει κείμενο, στιγμιότυπο οθόνης, αριθμός, λογισμικό  Περιγραφή που δημιουργήθηκε αυτόματα

Figure 2.4 – Lazy loading Angular module

Among other requests, you should see one named src_app_articles_articles_module_ts.js. It is the bundle of the lazy-loaded articles module that was loaded when you clicked on the Articles link.

We are now ready to convert our amazing Angular application into a professional blog website.

Before we move on, let’s add some additional routes to the app-routing.module.ts file:

const routes: Routes = [
  { path: 'contact', component: ContactComponent },
  { path: 'articles', loadChildren: () => import('./articles/articles.module').then(m => m.ArticlesModule) },
  { path: '', pathMatch: 'full', redirectTo: 'articles' },
  { path: '**', redirectTo: 'articles' }
];

We added a default route to automatically redirect our blog users to the articles path upon visiting the blog. Additionally, we created a new route configuration object with its path set to ** that also navigates to the articles path. The ** syntax is called the wildcard route, and it is triggered when the router cannot match a requested URL with a defined route.

Define the most specific routes first and then add any generic ones, such as the default and the wildcard routes. The Angular router parses the route configuration in the order that we define and follows a first-match-wins strategy to select one.

We have already enabled and configured routing in our Angular application. In the following section, we will establish the infrastructure needed to add blogging capabilities to our application.

 

Adding blog capabilities with Scully

Our application currently does not have any specific logic regarding blog posts. It is a typical Angular application that uses routing. However, by adding a routing configuration, we have established the foundation for adding blog support using Scully.

Scully needs at least one route defined in an Angular application to work correctly.

First, we need to install Scully in our application.

Installing the Scully library

We will use the install command of the npm CLI to install Scully in our Angular application:

npm install @scullyio/init @scullyio/ng-lib @scullyio/scully @scullyio/scully-plugin-puppeteer --force

The preceding command downloads and installs all the necessary npm packages for Scully to work correctly in our Angular application.

The Scully library is not fully compatible with Angular 16, as of this writing. In the preceding command we use the --force option to ignore any warnings that come from the Angular version incompatibility.

Open the app.module.ts file and import ScullyLibModule:

import { NgModule } from '@angular/core';
import { BrowserModule } from '@angular/platform-browser';
import { AppRoutingModule } from './app-routing.module';
import { AppComponent } from './app.component';
import { ContactModule } from './contact/contact.module';
import { CoreModule } from './core/core.module';
import { SharedModule } from './shared/shared.module';
import { ScullyLibModule } from '@scullyio/ng-lib';
@NgModule({
  declarations: [
    AppComponent
  ],
  imports: [
    BrowserModule,
    AppRoutingModule,
    CoreModule,
    SharedModule,
    ContactModule,
    ScullyLibModule
  ],
  providers: [],
  bootstrap: [AppComponent]
})
export class AppModule { }

ScullyLibModule is the main module of the Scully library; it contains various Angular services and directives that Scully will need.

Create a configuration file for the Scully library in the root folder of the Angular CLI workspace with the following contents:

scully.my-blog.config.ts

import { ScullyConfig } from '@scullyio/scully';
export const config: ScullyConfig = {
  projectRoot: "./src",
  projectName: "my-blog",
  outDir: './dist/static',
  routes: {
  }
};

The configuration file contains information about our Angular application that Scully will need along the way:

  • projectRoot: The path containing the source code of the Angular application
  • projectName: The name of the Angular application
  • outDir: The output path of the Scully-generated files

    The Scully output path must be different from the path that the Angular CLI outputs for the bundle of your Angular application. The latter can be configured in the angular.json file.

  • routes: It contains the route configuration that will be used for accessing our blog posts. Scully will populate it automatically, as we will see in the following section.

Since we have installed Scully successfully in our Angular application, we can now configure it to initialize our blog.

Initializing our blog page

Scully provides a specific Angular CLI schematic for initializing an Angular application, such as a blog, by using Markdown (.md) files:

ng generate @scullyio/init:markdown --project my-blog

The previous command will start the configuration process of our blog by going through a list of questions (default values are shown inside parentheses):

  1. Type posts as the name of the blog module:
    What name do you want to use for the module? (blog)
    

    This will create a new Angular module named posts.

  1. Leave the slug choice empty, and press Enter to accept the default value:
    What slug do you want for the markdown file? (id)
    

    The slug is a unique identifier for each post, and it is defined in the route configuration object of the module.

  1. Enter mdfiles as the path that Scully will use to store our actual blog post files:
    Where do you want to store your markdown files?
    

    This will create an mdfiles folder inside the root path of our Angular CLI project. By default, it will also create a blog post for our convenience. We will learn how to create our own in the Displaying blog data on the home page section.

  1. Type posts as the name of the route for accessing our blog posts:
    Under which route do you want your files to be requested?
    

The name of the route is the path property of the route configuration object that will be created.

Scully performs various actions upon executing the preceding commands, including the creation of the routing configuration of the posts module:

posts-routing.module.ts

import {NgModule} from '@angular/core';
import {Routes, RouterModule} from '@angular/router';
import {PostsComponent} from './posts.component';
const routes: Routes = [
  {
    path: ':id',
    component: PostsComponent,
  },
  {
    path: '**',
    component: PostsComponent,
  }
];
@NgModule({
  imports: [RouterModule.forChild(routes)],
  exports: [RouterModule],
})
export class PostsRoutingModule {}

The path property for the first route is set to :id and activates PostsComponent. The colon character indicates that id is a route parameter. The id parameter is related to the slug property defined earlier in the Scully configuration. Scully works by creating one route for each blog post that we create. It uses the route configuration of the posts module and the main application module to build the routes property in the Scully configuration file:

routes: {
  '/posts/:id': {
    type: 'contentFolder',
    id: {
      folder: "./mdfiles"
    }
  },
}

PostsComponent is the Angular component that is used to render the details of each blog post. The template file of the component can be further customized according to your needs:

posts.component.html

<h3>ScullyIo content</h3>
<hr>
<!-- This is where Scully will inject the static HTML -->
<scully-content></scully-content>
<hr>
<h4>End of content</h4>

You can customize all content in the previous template file except the <scully-content></scully-content> line, which is used internally by Scully.

At this point, we have completed the installation and configuration of Scully in our Angular application. It is now time for the final part of the project! In the next section, we will get Angular and Scully to cooperate and display blog posts in our Angular application.

 

Displaying blog posts on the home page

We would like our users to see the list of available blog posts as soon as they land on our blog website. According to the default route path that we have defined, ArticlesComponent is the landing page of our blog. Scully provides ScullyRoutesService, an Angular service that we can use in our components to get information about the routes that it will create according to the blog posts. Let’s put this service into action on our landing page:

  1. Open the articles.component.ts file and modify the import statements as follows:
    import { Component, OnInit } from '@angular/core';
    import { ScullyRoute, ScullyRoutesService } from '@scullyio/ng-lib';
    import { Observable, map } from 'rxjs';
    
  2. Add the OnInit interface to the list of implemented interfaces of the ArticlesComponent class:
    export class ArticlesComponent implements OnInit {
    }
    
  3. Inject ScullyRoutesService in the constructor of the ArticlesComponent class:
    constructor(private scullyService: ScullyRoutesService) { }
    
  4. Create the following component property:
    posts$: Observable<ScullyRoute[]> | undefined;
    
  5. Implement the ngOnInit method:
    ngOnInit(): void {
      this.posts$ = this.scullyService.available$.pipe(
        map(posts => posts.filter(post => post.title))
      );
    }
    
  6. Open the articles.component.html file and add the following HTML code:
    <div class="list-group mt-3">
      <a *ngFor="let post of posts$ | async"
        [routerLink]="post.route" class="list-group-item
          list-group-item-action">
        <div class="d-flex w-100 justify-content-between">
          <h5 class="mb-1">{{post.title}}</h5>
        </div>
        <p class="mb-1">{{post['description']}}</p>
      </a>
    </div>
    

There are many Angular techniques involved in the previous steps, so let’s break them down piece by piece.

When we want to use an Angular service in a component, we just need to ask for it from the Angular framework. How? By adding it as a property in the constructor of the component. The component does not need to know anything about how the service is implemented.

The ngOnInit method is part of the OnInit interface, which is implemented by our component. It is called by the Angular framework when a component is initialized and provides us with a hook to add custom logic to be executed.

Angular services that provide initialization logic to a component should be called inside the ngOnInit method and not in the constructor because it is easier to provide mocks about those services when unit testing the component.

The available$ property of ScullyRoutesService is called an observable and returns all the available routes that were generated from Scully when we subscribe to it. To avoid displaying routes other than those related to blog posts, such as the contact route, we filter out the results from the available$ property.

In the component template, we use the *ngFor Angular built-in directive and the async pipe to subscribe to the posts$ observable inside HTML. We can then access each item using the post template reference variable and use interpolation to display title and description.

Finally, we add a routerLink directive to each anchor element to navigate to the respective blog post when clicked. Notice that routerLink is surrounded by []. The [] syntax is called property binding, and we use it when we want to bind the property of an HTML element to a variable. In our case, we bind the routerLink directive to the route property of the post variable.

Now that we have finally completed all the pieces of the puzzle, we can see our blog website in action:

  1. Run the build command of the Angular CLI to build our Angular application:
    ng build
    
  2. Execute the following command to build Scully and generate our blog routes:
    npx scully --project my-blog
    

    The preceding command will create a scully-routes.json file inside the src\assets folder. It contains the routes of our Angular application and is needed by the Scully runtime.

    Running the Scully executable for the first time will prompt you to collect anonymous errors to improve its services.

  1. Run the following command to serve our blog:
    npx scully serve --project my-blog
    

The preceding command will start two web servers: one that contains the static prerendered version of our website built using Scully and another that is the Angular live version of our application:

Figure 2.5 – Serving our application

If we open our browser and navigate to http://localhost:1668, we will not see any blog posts. A blog post created with Scully is not returned in the available$ property of ScullyRoutesService unless we publish it. To publish a blog post, we do the following:

  1. Navigate to the mdfiles folder that Scully created and open the only .md file that you will find. The name and contents may vary for your file because it is based on the date Scully created it:
    ---
    title: 2023-06-22-posts
    description: 'blog description'
    published: false
    slugs:
        - ___UNPUBLISHED___lj738su6_7mqWyfNdmNCwovaCCi2tZItsDKMPJGcG
    ---
    # 2023-06-22-posts
    

    Scully has defined a set of properties between the closing and ending --- lines at the top of the file representing metadata about the blog post. You can also add your own as key-value pairs.

  1. Delete the slugs property and set the published property to true:
    ---
    title: 2023-06-22-posts
    description: 'blog description'
    published: true
    ---
    # 2023-06-22-posts
    
  2. Run the following command to force Scully to regenerate the routes of our application:
    npx scully --project my-blog
    

    We need to execute the previous command every time we make a change in our blog-related files.

  1. Execute the npx scully serve --project my-blog command and navigate to preview the generated website.

We can now see one blog post, the default one that was created when we installed Scully. Let’s create another one:

  1. Run the following generate command of the Angular CLI:
    ng generate @scullyio/init:post --name="Angular and Scully"
    

    In the preceding command, we use the @scullyio/init:post schematic, passing the name of the post that we want to create as an option.

  1. Set the target folder for the new blog post to mdfiles:
    What's the target folder for this post? (blog)
    
  2. Scully will create a Markdown file named angular-and-scully.md inside the specified folder. Open that file and update its content to be the same as the following:
    ---
    title: 'Angular and Scully'
    description: 'How to build a blog with Angular and Scully'
    published: true
    ---
    # Angular and Scully
    Angular is a robust JavaScript framework that we can use to build excellent and performant web applications.
    Scully is a popular static website generator that empowers the Angular framework with Jamstack characteristics.
    You can find more about them in the following links:
    - https://angular.io
    - https://scully.io
    - https://www.jamstack.org
    
  3. Run npx scully --project my-blog to create a route for the newly created blog post. Scully will also update the scully-routes.json file with the new route.

If we preview our application now, it should look like the following:

Εικόνα που περιέχει κείμενο, στιγμιότυπο οθόνης, γραμματοσειρά, γραμμή  Περιγραφή που δημιουργήθηκε αυτόματα

Figure 2.6 – List of blog posts

If we click on one of the blog items, we will navigate to the selected blog post. The content that is currently shown on the screen is a prerendered version of the blog post route:

Εικόνα που περιέχει κείμενο, στιγμιότυπο οθόνης, γραμματοσειρά  Περιγραφή που δημιουργήθηκε αυτόματα

Figure 2.7 – Blog post details

To verify that, navigate to the dist folder of your Angular project, where you will find two folders:

  • my-blog: This contains the Angular live version of our application. When we execute the ng build Angular CLI command, it builds our application and outputs bundle files in this folder.
  • static: This contains a prerendered version of our Angular application generated from Scully when we run the npx scully --project my-blog command.

If we navigate to the static folder, we will see that Scully has created one folder for each route of our Angular application. Each folder contains an index.html file, which represents the component that is activated from that route.

The contents of the index.html file are auto-generated by Scully, and behave as if we run our application live and navigate to that component.

Now you can take your Angular application, upload it to the CDN or web server of your choice, and you will have your blog ready in no time! All you will have to do then will be to exercise your writing skills to create excellent blog content.

 

Summary

In this chapter, we learned how to combine the Angular framework with the Scully library to create a personal blog.

We saw how Angular uses the built-in router package to enhance web applications with in-app navigation. We also learned how to organize an Angular application into modules and how to navigate through these.

We introduced Jamstack to our Angular application using the Scully library and saw how easy it is to convert our application into a prerendered blog. We used the Scully interface to create some blog posts and display them on the screen.

In the following chapter, we will investigate another exciting feature of the Angular framework, forms. We are going to learn how to use them and build an issue-tracking system.

 

Practice questions

Let’s take a look at a few practice questions:

  1. Which library do we use for routing in an Angular application?
  2. How do we add routing capabilities in an HTML anchor element?
  3. Which Angular pipe do we use for date formatting?
  4. What is the purpose of the assets folder in an Angular CLI application?
  5. Which route property do we use for lazily loading a module?
  6. Which npm CLI command do we use for installing Scully?
  7. Which service do we use for fetching Scully routes?
  8. What is property binding?
  9. Which Angular directive do we use for iterating over an array in HTML?
  10. What is the difference between a standard Angular application and a Scully one?
 

Further reading

Here are some links to build upon what we learned in this chapter:

About the Author
  • Aristeidis Bampakos

    Aristeidis Bampakos is a Web Development Team Lead at Plex-Earth who specializes in the development of web applications with Angular. He has been an Angular Google Developer Expert (GDE) since 2020 and works as an Angular Senior Tech Instructor at Code.Hub, a private educational institute, where he nurtures aspiring Angular developers and professionals. He is also the author of Angular Projects with Packt.

    Browse publications by this author
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