What is the difference between [ngFor] and [ngForOf] in angular2? What is the difference between [ngFor] and [ngForOf] in angular2? angular angular

What is the difference between [ngFor] and [ngForOf] in angular2?


ngFor and ngForOf are not two distinct things - they are actually the selectors of the NgForOf directive.

If you examine the source, you'll see that the NgForOf directive has as its selector: [ngFor][ngForOf] , meaning that both attributes need to be present on an element for the directive to 'activate' so to speak.

When you use *ngFor, the Angular compiler de-sugars that syntax into its cannonical form which has both attributes on the element.

So,

  <div *ngFor="let item of items"></div>

desugars to:

 <template [ngFor]="let item of items">     <div></div> </template>

This first de-sugaring is due to the '*'. The next de-sugaring is because of the micro syntax: "let item of items". The Angular compiler de-sugars that to:

 <template ngFor let-item="$implicit" [ngForOf]="items">   <div>...</div> </template>

(where you can think of $implicit as an internal variable that the directive uses to refer to the current item in the iteration).

In its canonical form, the ngFor attribute is just a marker, while the ngForOf attribute is actually an input to the directive that points to the the list of things you want to iterate over.

You can check out the Angular microsyntax guide to learn more.


ngFor is a structural directive of Angular which replaces the ng-repeat attribute of AngularJS

You can use ngFor as a shorthand

<li *ngFor="let item of items">{{item.name}}</li>

or as the longhand version

<template ngFor let-item="$implicit" [ngForOf]="items">  {{item.name}}</template>


In my opinion what I got from the angular document,

  • [ngFor] is not type safe
  • [NgForOf] is type safe

Because both class details are little different

  • ngFor Class type is any type

  • But ngForOf class type is generic ngForOf : NgIterable<T>


ngForOf looks like generics which I have already mentioned in my question.