When you use ahead-of-time compilation (AOT), you can control how your application is compiled by specifying Angular compiler options in the TypeScript configuration file.
The Angular options object, angularCompilerOptions
, is a sibling to the compilerOptions
object that supplies standard options to the TypeScript compiler.
tsconfig.json
/* To learn more about this file see: https://www.typescriptlang.org/docs/handbook/tsconfig-json.html. */{ "compileOnSave": false, "compilerOptions": { "baseUrl": "./", "outDir": "./dist/out-tsc", "forceConsistentCasingInFileNames": true, "strict": true, "noImplicitOverride": true, "noPropertyAccessFromIndexSignature": true, "noImplicitReturns": true, "noFallthroughCasesInSwitch": true, "sourceMap": true, "declaration": false, "downlevelIteration": true, "experimentalDecorators": true, "moduleResolution": "node", "importHelpers": true, "target": "es2020", "module": "es2020", "lib": [ "es2020", "dom" ] }, "angularCompilerOptions": { "enableI18nLegacyMessageIdFormat": false, "strictInjectionParameters": true, "strictInputAccessModifiers": true, "strictTemplates": true }}
Configuration inheritance with extends
Like the TypeScript compiler, the Angular AOT compiler also supports extends
in the angularCompilerOptions
section of the TypeScript configuration file.
The extends
property is at the top level, parallel to compilerOptions
and angularCompilerOptions
.
A TypeScript configuration can inherit settings from another file using the extends
property.
The configuration options from the base file are loaded first, then overridden by those in the inheriting configuration file.
For example:
tsconfig.app.json
/* To learn more about this file see: https://www.typescriptlang.org/docs/handbook/tsconfig-json.html. */{ "extends": "./tsconfig.json", "compilerOptions": { "outDir": "./out-tsc/app", "types": [] }, "files": [ "src/main.ts" ], "include": [ "src/**/*.d.ts" ], "exclude": [ "src/test.ts", "src/**/*.spec.ts", "src/**/*-specs.ts", "src/**/*.avoid.ts", "src/**/*.0.ts", "src/**/*.1.ts", "src/**/*.1b.ts", "src/**/*.2.ts", "src/**/*.3.ts", "src/**/*.4.ts", "src/**/*.5.ts", "src/**/*.6.ts", "src/**/*.7.ts", "src/**/testing" ], "angularCompilerOptions": { "strictTemplates": true, "preserveWhitespaces": true, "sourceMap": true, "declaration": false } }
For more information, see the TypeScript Handbook.
Template options
The following options are available for configuring the Angular AOT compiler.
annotationsAs
Modifies how Angular-specific annotations are emitted to improve tree-shaking.
Non-Angular annotations are not affected.
One of static fields
or decorators
. The default value is static fields
.
By default, the compiler replaces decorators with a static field in the class, which allows advanced tree-shakers like Closure compiler to remove unused classes
The
decorators
value leaves the decorators in place, which makes compilation faster. TypeScript emits calls to the__decorate
helper. Use--emitDecoratorMetadata
for runtime reflection.HELPFUL: That the resulting code cannot tree-shake properly.
annotateForClosureCompiler
When true
, use Tsickle to annotate the emitted JavaScript with JSDoc comments needed by the Closure Compiler.
Default is false
.
compilationMode
Specifies the compilation mode to use. The following modes are available:
Modes | Details |
---|---|
'full' |
Generates fully AOT-compiled code according to the version of Angular that is currently being used. |
'partial' |
Generates code in a stable, but intermediate form suitable for a published library. |
The default value is 'full'
.
For most applications, 'full'
is the correct compilation mode.
Use 'partial'
for independently published libraries, such as NPM packages.
'partial'
compilations output a stable, intermediate format which better supports usage by applications built at different Angular versions from the library.
Libraries built at "HEAD" alongside their applications and using the same version of Angular such as in a mono-repository can use 'full'
since there is no risk of version skew.
disableExpressionLowering
When true
, the default, transforms code that is or could be used in an annotation, to allow it to be imported from template factory modules.
See metadata rewriting for more information.
When false
, disables this rewriting, requiring the rewriting to be done manually.
disableTypeScriptVersionCheck
When true
, the compiler does not look at the TypeScript version and does not report an error when an unsupported version of TypeScript is used.
Not recommended, as unsupported versions of TypeScript might have undefined behavior.
Default is false
.
enableI18nLegacyMessageIdFormat
Instructs the Angular template compiler to create legacy ids for messages that are tagged in templates by the i18n
attribute.
See Mark text for translations for more information about marking messages for localization.
Set this option to false
unless your project relies upon translations that were created earlier using legacy IDs.
Default is true
.
The pre-Ivy message extraction tooling created a variety of legacy formats for extracted message IDs. These message formats have some issues, such as whitespace handling and reliance upon information inside the original HTML of a template.
The new message format is more resilient to whitespace changes, is the same across all translation file formats, and can be created directly from calls to $localize
.
This allows $localize
messages in application code to use the same ID as identical i18n
messages in component templates.
enableResourceInlining
When true
, replaces the templateUrl
and styleUrls
properties in all @Component
decorators with inline content in the template
and styles
properties.
When enabled, the .js
output of ngc
does not include any lazy-loaded template or style URLs.
For library projects created with the Angular CLI, the development configuration default is true
.
enableLegacyTemplate
When true
, enables the deprecated <template>
element in place of <ng-template>
.
Default is false
.
Might be required by some third-party Angular libraries.
flatModuleId
The module ID to use for importing a flat module (when flatModuleOutFile
is true
).
References created by the template compiler use this module name when importing symbols from the flat module.
Ignored if flatModuleOutFile
is false
.
flatModuleOutFile
When true
, generates a flat module index of the given filename and the corresponding flat module metadata.
Use to create flat modules that are packaged similarly to @angular/core
and @angular/common
.
When this option is used, the package.json
for the library should refer to the created flat module index instead of the library index file.
Produces only one .metadata.json
file, which contains all the metadata necessary for symbols exported from the library index.
In the created .ngfactory.js
files, the flat module index is used to import symbols. Symbols that include both the public API from the library index and shrouded internal symbols.
By default, the .ts
file supplied in the files
field is assumed to be the library index.
If more than one .ts
file is specified, libraryIndex
is used to select the file to use.
If more than one .ts
file is supplied without a libraryIndex
, an error is produced.
A flat module index .d.ts
and .js
is created with the given flatModuleOutFile
name in the same location as the library index .d.ts
file.
For example, if a library uses the public_api.ts
file as the library index of the module, the tsconfig.json
files
field would be ["public_api.ts"]
.
The flatModuleOutFile
option could then be set, for example, to "index.js"
, which produces index.d.ts
and index.metadata.json
files.
The module
field of the library's package.json
would be "index.js"
and the typings
field would be "index.d.ts"
.
fullTemplateTypeCheck
When true
, the recommended value, enables the binding expression validation phase of the template compiler. This phase uses TypeScript to verify binding expressions.
For more information, see Template type checking.
Default is false
, but when you use the Angular CLI command ng new --strict
, it is set to true
in the new project's configuration.
IMPORTANT: The fullTemplateTypeCheck
option has been deprecated in Angular 13 in favor of the strictTemplates
family of compiler options.
generateCodeForLibraries
When true
, creates factory files (.ngfactory.js
and .ngstyle.js
) for .d.ts
files with a corresponding .metadata.json
file. The default value is true
.
When false
, factory files are created only for .ts
files.
Do this when using factory summaries.
preserveWhitespaces
When false
, the default, removes blank text nodes from compiled templates, which results in smaller emitted template factory modules.
Set to true
to preserve blank text nodes.
HELPFUL: When using hydration, it is recommended that you use preserveWhitespaces: false
, which is the default value. If you choose to enable preserving whitespaces by adding preserveWhitespaces: true
to your tsconfig, it is possible you may encounter issues with hydration. This is not yet a fully supported configuration. Ensure this is also consistently set between the server and client tsconfig files. See the hydration guide for more details.
skipMetadataEmit
When true
, does not produce .metadata.json
files.
Default is false
.
The .metadata.json
files contain information needed by the template compiler from a .ts
file that is not included in the .d.ts
file produced by the TypeScript compiler.
This information includes, for example, the content of annotations, such as a component's template, which TypeScript emits to the .js
file but not to the .d.ts
file.
You can set to true
when using factory summaries, because the factory summaries include a copy of the information that is in the .metadata.json
file.
Set to true
if you are using TypeScript's --outFile
option, because the metadata files are not valid for this style of TypeScript output.
The Angular community does not recommend using --outFile
with Angular.
Use a bundler, such as webpack, instead.
skipTemplateCodegen
When true
, does not emit .ngfactory.js
and .ngstyle.js
files.
This turns off most of the template compiler and disables the reporting of template diagnostics.
Can be used to instruct the template compiler to produce .metadata.json
files for distribution with an npm
package. This avoids the production of .ngfactory.js
and .ngstyle.js
files that cannot be distributed to npm
.
For library projects created with the Angular CLI, the development configuration default is true
.
strictMetadataEmit
When true
, reports an error to the .metadata.json
file if "skipMetadataEmit"
is false
.
Default is false
.
Use only when "skipMetadataEmit"
is false
and "skipTemplateCodegen"
is true
.
This option is intended to verify the .metadata.json
files emitted for bundling with an npm
package.
The validation is strict and can emit errors for metadata that would never produce an error when used by the template compiler.
You can choose to suppress the error emitted by this option for an exported symbol by including @dynamic
in the comment documenting the symbol.
It is valid for .metadata.json
files to contain errors.
The template compiler reports these errors if the metadata is used to determine the contents of an annotation.
The metadata collector cannot predict the symbols that are designed for use in an annotation. It preemptively includes error nodes in the metadata for the exported symbols.
The template compiler can then use the error nodes to report an error if these symbols are used.
If the client of a library intends to use a symbol in an annotation, the template compiler does not normally report this. It gets reported after the client actually uses the symbol. This option allows detection of these errors during the build phase of the library and is used, for example, in producing Angular libraries themselves.
For library projects created with the Angular CLI, the development configuration default is true
.
strictInjectionParameters
When true
, reports an error for a supplied parameter whose injection type cannot be determined.
When false
, constructor parameters of classes marked with @Injectable
whose type cannot be resolved produce a warning.
The recommended value is true
, but the default value is false
.
When you use the Angular CLI command ng new --strict
, it is set to true
in the created project's configuration.
strictTemplates
When true
, enables strict template type checking.
The strictness flags that this option enables allow you to turn on and off specific types of strict template type checking. See troubleshooting template errors.
When you use the Angular CLI command ng new --strict
, it is set to true
in the new project's configuration.
trace
When true
, prints extra information while compiling templates.
Default is false
.
Command line options
Most of the time, you interact with the Angular Compiler indirectly using Angular CLI. When debugging certain issues, you might find it useful to invoke the Angular Compiler directly.
You can use the ngc
command provided by the @angular/compiler-cli
npm package to call the compiler from the command line.
The ngc
command is a wrapper around TypeScript's tsc
compiler command. The Angular Compiler is primarily configured through tsconfig.json
while Angular CLI is primarily configured through angular.json
.
Besides the configuration file, you can also use tsc
command line options to configure ngc
.