Note - scroll down the answer for ng-model binding
You could actually do that, just that you need to invoke internal changelistener tick (similar to digest) to update binding in the zone, You can just add a (keyup)
event for that. Similarly you could use directive bindings as well with properties
dictionary of component settings.
Example:-
<input #label (keyup)>
<!-- variable #label represented as the element itself and accessible as property on controller instance
You can even bind keyup to a function or another another function and pass value from the label property-->
Display as:
<p>{{label.value}}</P>
Parent Component has a textbox and a label.
import { Component, bootstrap} from '@angular/core';
import {Display} from 'display';
@Component({
selector: 'my-app',
template: `<p><b>Parent Component:</b><p><input #label (keyup) (change)="handleChange(label.value)">
<p>{{label.value}}</P> <display [text]="label"></display></p></p>`,
directives: [Display]
})
class MainComponent {
label: any;
constructor() {
}
handleChange(label){
this.label = label;
console.log(this.label);
}
}
Now displaying it in child component as well:
@Component({
selector: 'edit',
template: `<p><b>Child Component:</b></p>{{text.value}}`
})
export class Edit {
@Input() text:any;
}
Demo
Update - ng-model for 2-way binding
Though Angular2 is one-time bound by default, ngModel
sugar has been introduced to achieve 2-way binding. With that you could do for instance:
<input ngControl="name" [(ngModel)]="name">
Here usage of square brackets ([..]
) suggests the property binding and round brackets ((..)
) for event binding. Basically when you use ng-model
, you are enabling both the bindings ngModel
is more of an event. Behind the scenes it creates an observable event(with EventEmitter
) to track the value
changes in the bound element and update the bound property respectively.
For example:-
Include formDirectives:
import {FORM_DIRECTIVES} from '@angular/common';
and with form
<form (ngSubmit)="onSubmit()" let-f="form">
<input ngControl="name" [(ngModel)]="name">
<button>Click me and check console</button>
</form>
without form
<input [(ngModel)]="name">
<button (click)="onSubmit()">Click me and check console</button>
not necessary anymore
include formDirectives dependency in view annotation.
@Component({
template: .....,
directives: [FORM_DIRECTIVES]
})
Demo
Also read the nice write up from Victor Savkin on Two-way binding in angular2 by creating the ng-model event and how it works.