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Diffstat (limited to 'docs/content/guide/dev_guide.introduction.ngdoc')
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diff --git a/docs/content/guide/dev_guide.introduction.ngdoc b/docs/content/guide/dev_guide.introduction.ngdoc index 0a41cc9b..b4cf3bd7 100644 --- a/docs/content/guide/dev_guide.introduction.ngdoc +++ b/docs/content/guide/dev_guide.introduction.ngdoc @@ -3,30 +3,24 @@ @name Developer Guide: Introduction @description - Angular is pure client-side technology, written entirely in JavaScript. It works with the long-established technologies of the web (HTML, CSS, and JavaScript) to make the development of web apps easier and faster than ever before. - One important way that angular simplifies web development is by increasing the level of abstraction between the developer and most low-level web app development tasks. Angular automatically takes care of many of these tasks, including: - * DOM Manipulation * Setting Up Listeners and Notifiers * Input Validation - Because angular handles much of the work involved in these tasks, developers can concentrate more on application logic and less on repetitive, error-prone, lower-level coding. - At the same time that angular simplifies the development of web apps, it brings relatively sophisticated techniques to the client-side, including: - * Separation of data, application logic, and presentation components * Data Binding between data and presentation components * Services (common web app operations, implemented as substitutable objects) @@ -34,18 +28,14 @@ sophisticated techniques to the client-side, including: * An extensible HTML compiler (written entirely in JavaScript) * Ease of Testing - These techniques have been for the most part absent from the client-side for far too long. - ## Single-page / Round-trip Applications - You can use angular to develop both single-page and round-trip apps, but angular is designed primarily for developing single-page apps. Angular supports browser history, forward and back buttons, and bookmarking in single-page apps. - You normally wouldn't want to load angular with every page change, as would be the case with using angular in a round-trip app. However, it would make sense to do so if you were adding a subset of angular's features (for example, templates to leverage angular's data-binding feature) to an |
