Great video talking about sharing Data Between Angular Components - Parent to Child, Child to Parent, and between siblings by Jeff Delaney, AngularFirebase.
(COPIED HERE FOR MY OWN FUTURE REFERENCE)
Data sharing is an essential concept to understand before diving into your first Angular project. In this lesson, I provide four different methods for sharing data between Angular components.
The Parent-Child-Sibling structure of our Angular app.
Parent to Child: Sharing Data via Input()
This is probably the most common and straightforward method of sharing data. It works by using the
Input()
decorator to allow data to be passed via the template.parent.component.ts
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child.component.ts
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Child to Parent: Sharing Data via ViewChild()
ViewChild allows a one component to be injected into another, giving the parent access to its attributes and functions. One caveat, however, is that child won’t be available until after the view has been initialized. This means we need to implement the AfterViewInit lifecycle hook to receive the data from the child.
parent.component.ts
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child.component.ts
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Child to Parent: Sharing Data via Output() and EventEmitter
Another way to share data is to emit data from the child, which can be listed to by the parent. This approach is ideal when you want to share data changes that occur on things like button clicks, form entires, and other user events.
In the parent, we create a function to receive the message and set it equal to the message variable.
In the child, we declare a messageEvent variable with the Output decorator and set it equal to a new event emitter. Then we create a function named sendMessage that calls emit on this event with the message we want to send. Lastly, we create a button to trigger this function.
The parent can now subscribe to this messageEvent that’s outputted by the child component, then run the receive message function whenever this event occurs.
parent.component.ts
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child.component.ts
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Unrelated Components: Sharing Data with a Service
When passing data between components that lack a direct connection, such as siblings, grandchildren, etc, you should you a shared service. When you have data that should aways been in sync, I find the RxJS BehaviorSubject very useful in this situation.
You can also use a regular RxJS Subject for sharing data via the service, but here’s why I prefer a BehaviorSubject.
- It will always return the current value on subscription - there is no need to call
onnext
- It has a
getValue()
function to extract the last value as raw data. - It ensures that the component always receives the most recent data.
In the service, we create a private BehaviorSubject that will hold the current value of the message. We define a currentMessage variable handle this data stream as an observable that will be used by the components. Lastly, we create function that calls next on the BehaviorSubject to change its value.
The parent, child, and sibling components all receive the same treatment. We inject the DataService in the constructor, then subscribe to the currentMessage observable and set its value equal to the message variable.
Now if we create a function in any one of these components that changes the value of the message. when this function is executed the new data it’s automatically broadcast to all other components.
data.service.ts
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parent.component.ts
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sibling.component.ts
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