A. beforeFilter()
B. afterFilter()
C. ActionFilters
D. ControlFilter()
. . . . . helps you to maintain data when you move from controller to view.
You can use . . . . . class to send the result back in JSON format in MVC.
For controller action method . . . . . returns nothing as the result.
AngularJS supports . . . . . kind(s) of data binding.
AngularJS never regenerates the HTML again.
AngularJS bindings are . . . . . , meaning that when the value associated with the binding is changed (in the data model), the HTML element will be updated.
You can use the . . . . . . directive, in order to bind the innerHTML of the element to the specified model property.
Any change to the . . . . and . . . . . properties affects these bindings and consequently the user interface content.
In two-way binding, changes done to a model are reflected in the view, but the reverse also holds true sometimes.
You can create bindings only for the data values that are added to the . . . . . object by the controller.