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---
title: Overview of the Nx Angular Plugin
description: The Nx Plugin for Angular contains executors, generators, and utilities for managing Angular applications and libraries within an Nx workspace.
---
The Nx Plugin for Angular contains executors, generators, and utilities for managing Angular applications and libraries
within an Nx workspace. It provides:
- Integration with libraries such as Storybook, Jest and Cypress.
- Generators to help scaffold code quickly, including:
- Micro Frontends
- Libraries, both internal to your codebase and publishable to npm
- Single Component Application Modules (SCAMs)
- NgRx helpers.
- Utilities for automatic workspace refactoring.
{% callout type="note" title="Currently using the Angular CLI?" %}
You can easily and mostly **automatically migrate from an Angular CLI** project to Nx! Learn
more [here](/recipes/angular/migration/angular).
{% /callout %}
## Setting Up @nx/angular
### Installation
{% callout type="note" title="Keep Nx Package Versions In Sync" %}
Make sure to install the `@nx/angular` version that matches the version of `nx` in your repository. If the version numbers get out of sync, you can encounter some difficult to debug errors. You can [fix Nx version mismatches with this recipe](/recipes/tips-n-tricks/keep-nx-versions-in-sync).
{% /callout %}
In any Nx workspace, you can install `@nx/angular` by running the following command:
{% tabs %}
{% tab label="Nx 18+" %}
```shell {% skipRescope=true %}
nx add @nx/angular
```
This will install the correct version of `@nx/angular`.
{% /tab %}
{% tab label="Nx < 18" %}
Install the `@nx/angular` package with your package manager.
```shell
npm add -D @nx/angular
```
{% /tab %}
{% /tabs %}
{% callout type="note" title="Angular Tutorials" %}
For a full tutorial experience, follow the [Angular Standalone Tutorial](/getting-started/tutorials/angular-standalone-tutorial) or the [Angular Monorepo Tutorial](/getting-started/tutorials/angular-monorepo-tutorial)
{% /callout %}
## Using the Angular Plugin
### Generating an application
It's straightforward to generate an Angular application:
```shell
nx g @nx/angular:app appName
```
By default, the application will be generated with:
- ESLint as the linter.
- Jest as the unit test runner.
- Cypress as the E2E test runner.
We can then serve, build, test, lint, and run e2e tests on the application with the following commands:
```shell
nx serve appName
nx build appName
nx test appName
nx lint appName
nx e2e appName
```
### Generating a library
Generating an Angular library is very similar to generating an application:
```shell
nx g @nx/angular:lib libName
```
By default, the library will be generated with:
- ESLint as the linter.
- Jest as the unit test runner.
We can then test and lint the library with the following commands:
```shell
nx test libName
nx lint libName
```
Read more about:
- [Creating Libraries](/concepts/more-concepts/creating-libraries)
- [Library Types](/concepts/more-concepts/library-types)
- [Buildable and Publishable Libraries](/concepts/more-concepts/buildable-and-publishable-libraries)
### Fallback to `@schematics/angular`
If you try to invoke a generator that is not present in `@nx/angular`, the request will automatically be forwarded on
to `@schematics/angular`. So, even though there is no `@nx/angular:service` generator, the following command will
successfully create a service:
```shell
nx g @nx/angular:service my-service
```
## More Documentation
- [Angular Standalone Tutorial](/getting-started/tutorials/angular-standalone-tutorial)
- [Angular Monorepo Tutorial](/getting-started/tutorials/angular-monorepo-tutorial)
- [Migrating from the Angular CLI](/recipes/angular/migration/angular)
- [Setup Module Federation with Angular and Nx](/concepts/module-federation/faster-builds-with-module-federation)
- [Using Tailwind CSS with Angular projects](/recipes/angular/using-tailwind-css-with-angular-projects)