Understanding the @for Loop
In Angular 17 to improve the developer experience @for is introduced. Before that, we were required to import the ngFor directive from @angular/common to iterate over arrays in Angular templates.
Syntax:
@for (item of items; track item) {
// Html template to repeat
}
@empty {
// optional block to be displayed when collection is empty
}
@empty Block: You can optionally define an @empty block that will be rendered only if the collection is empty. This allows you to handle cases where there’s no data to display
Contextual variables
Contextual variables refers to the iteration variables. These variables are only accessible within the @for block and its nested child templates.
Following are the Contextual variables present in @for block:
Variable | Description |
---|---|
$count | Specifies number of items in a collection iterated over |
$index | Specifies Index of the current row |
$first | Specifies if the current row is the first row |
$last | Specifies if the current row is the last row |
$even | Specifies if the current row index is even |
$odd | Specifies if the current row index is odd |
@for Loop in Angular 17
In Angular, working with arrays, iterables, and object properties is a common task. The @for is a block that repeats a section of HTML for each item in a collection. It is commonly used to iterate over arrays or lists and generate dynamic content based on the data provided. In this article, we’ll explore how to use the @for
loop in Angular 17 to create dynamic templates.
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