@ionic/angular
Ionic Angular specific building blocks on top of @ionic/core components.
Related
License
Testing Local Ionic Framework with ng add
This guide shows you how to test the local Ionic Framework build with a new Angular application using ng add
. This is useful for development and testing changes before publishing.
Prerequisites
- Node.js and npm installed
- Angular CLI installed globally (
npm install -g @angular/cli
)
Build Local Ionic Framework
-
Clone the repository (if not already done):
git clone https://github.com/ionic-team/ionic-framework.git
cd ionic-framework
-
Pull the latest from main
git pull origin main
-
Install dependencies and build the core
package:
cd core
npm install
npm run build
-
Install dependencies, sync the core
build and build the Angular package:
cd ../packages/angular
npm install
npm run sync
npm run build
-
Create a tarball:
cd dist
npm pack
-
Copy the tarball to Downloads:
cp ionic-angular-*.tgz ~/Downloads/ionic-angular.tgz
Test with New Angular App
-
Create a new Angular app:
cd ~/Documents/
ng new my-app --style=css --ssr=false --zoneless=false
cd my-app
-
Install the local @ionic/angular
package:
npm install ~/Downloads/ionic-angular.tgz
-
Run ng add
:
ng add @ionic/angular --skip-confirmation
-
Serve the app:
ng serve
The local Ionic Framework build is now active in the Angular app. Changes to the Ionic source code require rebuilding the packages and reinstalling the tarball to see updates.
Project Structure
common
This is where logic that is shared between lazy loaded and standalone components live. For example, the lazy loaded IonPopover and standalone IonPopover components extend from a base IonPopover implementation that exists in this directory.
Note: This directory exposes internal APIs and is only accessed in the standalone
and src
submodules. Ionic developers should never import directly from @ionic/angular/common
. Instead, they should import from @ionic/angular
or @ionic/angular/standalone
.
standalone
This is where the standalone component implementations live. It was added as a separate entry point to avoid any lazy loaded logic from accidentally being pulled in to the final build. Having a separate directory allows the lazy loaded implementation to remain accessible from @ionic/angular
for backwards compatibility.
Ionic developers can access this by importing from @ionic/angular/standalone
.
src
This is where the lazy loaded component implementations live.
Ionic developers can access this by importing from @ionic/angular
.