What is an AngularJS directive?
Looking at the documentation, directives are structures you can write that angularjs parses in order to create objects and behaviors.In other words it's a template in which you use mix of any arbitrary nodes and pseudo-javascript and placeholders for data to express intentions of how your widget (component) is structured, how it behaves and how it is feed with data. Angularjs then runs against those directives to translate them into working html/javascript code.
Directives are there to so you can build more complex components (widgets) using proper semantics. Just take a look at the angularjs example of directives - they're defining the tab pane (which isn't of course valid in regular HTML). It's more intuitive than using like div-s or spans to create structure which is then styled to look like a tab pane.
Maybe a really simple and initial definition for angular directives would be
AngularJS directives (ng-directives) are HTML attributes with an ng prefix (ng-model, ng-app, ng-repeat, ng-bind) used by Angular to extends HTML. (from: W3schools angular tutorial)
Some examples of this would be
The ng-app directive defines an AngularJS application.
The ng-model directive binds the value of HTML controls (input, select, textarea) to application data.
The ng-bind directive binds application data to the HTML view.
<div ng-app="">
<p>Name: <input type="text" ng-model="name"></p>
<p ng-bind="name"></p>
</div>
Check this tutorial , at least for me it was one of the best introductions to Angular. A more complete approach would be everything that @mark-rajcok said before.
What it is (see the clear definition of jQuery as an example)?
A directive is essentially a function† that executes when the Angular compiler finds it in the DOM. The function(s) can do almost anything, which is why I think it is rather difficult to define what a directive is. Each directive has a name (like ng-repeat, tabs, make-up-your-own) and each directive determines where it can be used: element, attribute, class, in a comment.
† A directive normally only has a (post)link function. A complicated directive could have a compile function, a pre-link function, and a post-link function.
What practical problems and situations is it intended to address?
The most powerful thing directives can do is extend HTML. Your extensions are a Domain Specific Language (DSL) for building your application. E.g., if your application runs an online shopping site, you can extend HTML to have "shopping-cart", "coupon", "specials", etc. directives -- whatever words or objects or concepts are more natural to use within the "online shopping" domain, rather than "div"s and "span"s (as @WTK already mentioned).
Directives can also componentize HTML -- group a bunch of HTML into some reusable component. If you find yourself using ng-include to pull in lots of HTML, it is probably time to refactor into directives.
What design pattern does it embody, or alternatively, how does it fit into the purported MVC/MVW mission of angularjs
Directives are where you manipulate the DOM and catch DOM events. This is why the directive's compile and link functions both receive the "element" as an argument. You can
- define a bunch of HTML (i.e., a template) to replace the directive
- bind events to this element (or its children)
- add/remove a class
- change the text() value
- watch for changes to attributes defined in the same element (actually it is the attributes' values that are watched -- these are scope properties, hence the directive watches the "model" for changes)
- etc.
In HTML we have things like
<a href="...">
, <img src="...">
, <br>
, <table><tr><th>
. How would you describe what a, href, img, src, br, table, tr, and th are? That's what a directive is.