Angular Progressive Web Apps (PWA) MasterClass & FREE E-Book

  • Overview
  • Curriculum
  • Instructor
  • Review

About This Course

Practical Guide to Angular Progressive Web Applications (PWA)

This Course In a Nutshell - Part 1 Angular Service Worker (includes the Typescript Jumpstart Ebook)

In the first part of the course we are going to dive straight into the Angular Service Worker and the built-in Angular CLI PWA support. We are going to take as the starting point a plain Angular Application, and we are going to start adding PWA features on top of it in order to turn it into a Progressive Web Application.

We will start by adding the Angular Service Worker and have the Application Download & Installation feature up and running. We will learn all about Application Version Management and we will learn about the multiple caching strategies available for caching not only the application bundles, but also the application data.

We will then add an Application Shell using the Angular CLI and Angular Universal, and make the application One-Click Installable using an App Manifest. Finally we will add Push Notifications to the application using the Angular Service Worker, for a complete mobile-like PWA experience.

This Course In a Nutshell - Part 2 - Service Workers Fundamentals

In this second part, you will learn about Progressive Web Applications in general (including Service Workers, App Manifest, and the Cache Storage API.), and you will use these APIs to implement several native-like features: One-Click Install, Offline support, application download and installation, application data caching and more.

We will also learn Service Worker Web Fundamentals from first principles using built-in browser APIs directly and we will confirm our understanding of what is going on in every step of the way using the PWA built-in Chrome Dev Tools.

The knowledge learned on this section has a long shelf live, as its about browser fundamentals and how the new PWA Web works in general, so everything learned here is still applicable to any other development platform other than Angular.

Why PWAs? Build the Future Of the Web Today

The future of the Web is clearly going in one direction: Progressive Web Applications! With the upcoming Safari support and the ability to install a PWA directly to a Windows desktop, PWAs are the new generation of web applications that will bridge the gap towards Native Apps: this will even include in the near future things like Bluetooth and Payments.

PWAs look and feel like native apps, but there is no App Store and all its issues involved: instead a web application can now be installed directly to the user desktop or home screen with one single click!

The application will then install itself immediately on the background, so that it does not have to be downloaded again unless a new version is available.

The application will feel blazing fast in a way that until now only native apps could: A PWA is offline, background sync and notification capable.

PWAs are not mobile-specific: any application can benefit from starting up an order of magnitude faster! The Angular CLI PWA support and the Angular Service Worker take PWA features to another level: we will be able to add PWA features reliably to our application in a transparent way via the Angular CLI, as part of the production build process.

But we will still need to understand how PWA features work under the hood, in order to troubleshoot any issues, interact with the Angular Service Worker or configure the Angular CLI.

Course Overview

In part 1, we are going to take PWA features one at a time.These features where designed to be used together, so using them to implement a concrete use case is the best way to learn them. The main component of a PWA is a Service Worker, so that is our starting point.

We are going to learn all about the Service Worker lifecycle, how multiple versions of the service worker are handled by the browser, and we will learn multiple Service worker installation and activation GOTCHAs. We are then going to build a service worker that gives to an application the ability of showing an offline page when the network is down, using the Cache API.

Most of the PWA APIs are Promise-based, so to make the code more readable we are going to be using Async / Await in our examples. We are then going to implement Application Download and Installation: we are going to see how we can use a Service Worker to completely download a version of the website into a user's mobile or desktop, and how to handle the installation of multiple versions of the application.

We are going to demo the performance benefits of caching the complete application locally by simulating a slow network, and learn how to clean previous versions of an application. We will also learn how to cache UI-specific data and derived View Model data on the client side using Indexed DB and a Service Worker, and we will also earn how to implement Background Sync.

The next section of the course will cover all about the App Manifest and how to configure that one-click installation experience that we are looking for. After that, we will inspect our application with the Lighthouse tool and analyze the generated report.

The last part of this PWA fundamentals section will cover Web Push and Notifications. In this section, we are going to setup a node server with Web Push capabilities, and then we are going to link it to our service worker in order to implement mobile-like Notifications.

What Will you Learn In this Course?

You will learn how the PWA Browser features work in general, not only in the context of an Angular application. You will know how to analyze and troubleshoot PWAs using the Chrome PWA Dev Tools. You will also learn how to leverage the Angular Service Worker, and all the Angular CLI PWA features to build PWA-enabled web applications.

What Will You be able to do at the End Of This Course?

You will be able to design, develop and troubleshoot PWAs, plus you will know how to quickly add PWA features to an Angular Application leveraging the Angular CLI and the Angular Service Worker.

Have a look at the course free lessons below, and please enjoy the course!

  • Code in Github repository with downloadable ZIP files per section

  • Learn in detail multiple features made available by the Angular Service Worker

  • Learn How to turn your Angular Application into a PWA

Course Curriculum

1 Lectures

Instructor

Profile photo of Angular University
Angular University

Hello, I'm Vasco Cavalheiro and I'm an online instructor at the Angular University.Over the years I have helped over 200k developers to learn the Angular framework and its surrounding ecosystem of technologies.Check out my Linkedin in the links section on the top right.About the Angular University:The Angular University aims to be the one place that you go in order to...

Review
4.9 course rating
4K ratings
ui-avatar of Klets Maksym
Klets M.
5.0
8 months ago

As usual you are on the top :)

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ui-avatar of Mariyan Nonchev
Mariyan N.
1.0
10 months ago

Outdated

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ui-avatar of Gaurav Behare
Gaurav B.
5.0
10 months ago

NA

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ui-avatar of Thomas Schulte
Thomas S.
4.5
1 year ago

Perfect, as always! ⭐⭐⭐

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ui-avatar of Samuel Schmid
Samuel S.
2.0
1 year ago

The course provides a foundational understanding of PWA, but it's hampered by outdated materials and error-prone commands. I found Angular 17's official documentation to be more relevant and current.

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ui-avatar of Mantas Višinskas
Mantas V.
5.0
1 year ago

Very useful and clearly explained, as always.

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ui-avatar of Jkrupicka
Jkrupicka
4.0
1 year ago

Thank you, it was pretty useful to me.
It is true that the course was recorded quite some time ago so it uses older versions of stuff, it is also true that the provided code needs small fixes in order to work (one star down), but nevertheless the course provided pretty GREAT explanation of how Service Workers work technically with nice level of details, explained well step by step.
I am THRILLED about what I learned here, since it is exactly what I came here for!

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ui-avatar of Manuel Postl
Manuel P.
1.0
1 year ago

Ein sehr großer Anteil der Abschnitte ist bereits sehr stark veraltet. Dadurch können viele gezeigte Kommandos erst gar nicht ausgeführt werden. Ein folgen des Kurses ist daher nicht möglich.

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A very large proportion of the sections are already very out of date. As a result, many commands shown cannot be executed at all. It is therefore not possible to properly follow the course.

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ui-avatar of Pieter Theron
Pieter T.
3.0
2 years ago

The course content is good, but I thought this course is about Angular PWA. In the end it was pure Vanilla PWA. The course content only touched a few points on angular PWA, and I did not really see it in action.

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ui-avatar of Van Khanh Ho
Van K. H.
1.0
2 years ago

Please update the course or create a new course with the newest version of Angular. The content is outdated we're now with Angular 16!

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