Foodies was a course-project where we had to make a blog using Angular.
All of the recipe data is fetched from a RESTful API which is then parsed and formatted using various services and pipes. Users can also log in to create their own posts and react to existing recipes which is saved using localstorage.
This project taught me more about integrating APIs into web-projects and Angular's approach to the single responsibility principle. The learning curve was steep in the beginning with both learning Angular's main concepts and TypeScript, but after a while things went really smooth. Wish I had spent more time on styling, but the main focus was elsewhere for this project. Until next time!
Everything below is generated from generating a new angular project using Angulars CLI.
This project was generated using Angular CLI version 19.0.4.
To start a local development server, run:
ng serve
Once the server is running, open your browser and navigate to http://localhost:4200/
. The application will automatically reload whenever you modify any of the source files.
Angular CLI includes powerful code scaffolding tools. To generate a new component, run:
ng generate component component-name
For a complete list of available schematics (such as components
, directives
, or pipes
), run:
ng generate --help
To build the project run:
ng build
This will compile your project and store the build artifacts in the dist/
directory. By default, the production build optimizes your application for performance and speed.
To execute unit tests with the Karma test runner, use the following command:
ng test
For end-to-end (e2e) testing, run:
ng e2e
Angular CLI does not come with an end-to-end testing framework by default. You can choose one that suits your needs.
For more information on using the Angular CLI, including detailed command references, visit the Angular CLI Overview and Command Reference page.