Prior to this commit, listeners order was not preserved in case we coalesce them to avoid triggering unnecessary change detection cycles. For performance reasons we were attaching listeners to existing events at head (always using first listener as an anchor), to avoid going through the list, thus breaking the order in which listeners are registered. In some scenarios this order might be important (for example with `ngModelChange` and `input` listeners), so this commit updates the logic to put new listeners at the end of the list. In order to avoid performance implications, we keep a pointer to the last listener in the list, so adding a new listener takes constant amount of time.
PR Close#32484
We need to be clearer to developers who upgrade to v9 (next) and get this
error, why they have a problem and what they have to do about it.
Once we have a better CLI schematics story, where this import will be
included by default in new applications and a CLI migration will add it
when upgrading apps to v9, we could simplify or remove this error message.
PR Close#32491
Fixes an issue where Ivy incorrectly inserts items in the beginning of an `ngFor`, if the `ngFor` is set on an `ng-container`. The issue comes from the fact that we choose the `ng-container` comment node as the anchor point before which to insert the content, however the node might be after any of the nodes inside the container. These changes switch to picking out the first node inside of the container instead.
PR Close#32324
Historically bind() used to be a separate instruction. With a series of
refactoring it became a utility function but after recent code changes
it does not provide any valuable abstraction / help. On the contrary -
it can be seen as a performance problem (forces unnecessary comparison to
`NO_CHANGE` during change detection).
PR Close#32489
Prior to this fix if a `NO_CHANGE` value was assigned to a binding, or
an interpolation value rendererd a `NO_CHANGE` value, then the presence
of that value would cause the internal counter index values to not
increment properly. This patch ensures that this doesn't happen and
that the counter/bitmask values update accordingly.
PR Close#32143
PR #32154 introduced `platform` and `any` for `providedIn` and the doc has a minor typo.
Also a test name was not changed accordingly to the refactoring done.
PR Close#32410
Since property binding metadata storage is guarded with the ngDevMode now
and several instructions were merged together, we can simplify the way we
store and read property binding metadata.
PR Close#32457
This commit changes the Angular compiler (ivy-only) to generate `$localize`
tagged strings for component templates that use `i18n` attributes.
BREAKING CHANGE
Since `$localize` is a global function, it must be included in any applications
that use i18n. This is achieved by importing the `@angular/localize` package
into an appropriate bundle, where it will be executed before the renderer
needs to call `$localize`. For CLI based projects, this is best done in
the `polyfills.ts` file.
```ts
import '@angular/localize';
```
For non-CLI applications this could be added as a script to the index.html
file or another suitable script file.
PR Close#31609
DebugElement.query also searches elements that may have been created
outside of Angular (ex: with `document.appendChild`). The current
behavior attempts to get the LContext of these nodes but throws an error
because the LContext does not exist.
PR Close#32361
Extend the vocabulary of the `providedIn` to also include `'platform'` and `'any'`` scope.
```
@Injectable({
providedId: 'platform', // tree shakable injector for platform injector
})
class MyService {...}
```
PR Close#32154
TestBed.get is not type safe, fixing it would be a massive breaking
change. The Angular team has proposed replacing it with TestBed.inject
and deprecate TestBed.get.
Deprecation from TestBed.get will come as a separate commit.
Issue #26491Fixes#29905
BREAKING CHANGE: Injector.get now accepts abstract classes to return
type-safe values. Previous implementation returned `any` through the
deprecated implementation.
PR Close#32200
Reworks the compiler to output the factories for directives, components and pipes under a new static field called `ngFactoryFn`, instead of the usual `factory` property in their respective defs. This should eventually allow us to inject any kind of decorated class (e.g. a pipe).
**Note:** these changes are the first part of the refactor and they don't include injectables. I decided to leave injectables for a follow-up PR, because there's some more cases we need to handle when it comes to their factories. Furthermore, directives, components and pipes make up most of the compiler output tests that need to be refactored and it'll make follow-up PRs easier to review if the tests are cleaned up now.
This is part of the larger refactor for FW-1468.
PR Close#31953
Binding metadata are only needed:
- for property bindings;
- when TestBed tests are being run.
This commit guards binding metadata storage with the ngDevMode flag
which saves ~6% of a proerty binding processing time in the production
mode (and reduces bundle size).
PR Close#32317
After a series of recent refactorings `enterView` and `leaveView` became
identical. This PR merges both into one concept of view selectio (similar
to a node selection). This reduces number of concepts and code size.
PR Close#32263
This commit removes all the (duplicated) logic of setting lView[BINDING_INDEX]
from `enterView`. `enterView` is on the critcal path perf-wise so we should
avoid having any logic in there and minimise memory read / write.
This simple refactoring in this PR reduces time spent in noop change detection
by ~12% (from ~800ms down to ~700ms on a local machine where measurements were
taken).
PR Close#32263
Prior to this change, the `BINDING_INDEX` of a given lView was reset after processing a template. However change detection can be triggered as a result of View queries processing, thus leading to subsequent `refreshView` call (and executing a template), which in turn operates with the binding index that is not reset after the previous `refreshView` call. This commit updates the logic to reset binding index before we execute a template, so binding index is correct for instructions inside template function.
PR Close#32201
This commit drops our custom, change-detection specific, equality comparison util
in favour of the standard Object.is which has desired semantics.
There are multiple advantages of this approach:
- less code to maintain on our end;
- avoid NaN checks if both values are equal;
- re-write NaN checks so we don't trigger V8 deoptimizations.
PR Close#32212
Angular hooks come after 2 flavours:
- init hooks (OnInit, AfterContentInit, AfterViewInit);
- check hooks (OnChanges, DoChanges, AfterContentChecked, AfterViewChecked).
We need to do more processing for init hooks to ensure that those hooks
are run once and only once for a given directive (even in case of errors).
As soon as all init hooks execute to completion we are only left with the
checks to execute.
It turns out that keeping track of the remaining init hooks to execute is
rather expensive (multiple LView flags reads, writes and checks). But we can
observe that non of this tracking is needed as soon as all init hooks are
completed.
This PR takes advantage of the above observations and splits hooks processing
functions into:
- init-specific (slower but less common);
- check-specific (faster and more common).
NOTE: there is code duplication in this PR and it is left like this intentinally:
hand-inlining this perf-critical code makes the view refresh process substentially
faster.
PR Close#32131
TypeScript downlevels `for-of` loops for ES5 targets. As a result, generated output contains extra code, including a try-catch block, which has code size and performance implications. This is especially important for runtime code where we want to keep it as small as possible. This commit changes `for-of` loops in runtime code to regular `for` loops.
PR Close#32157
In VE the `Sanitizer` is always available in `BrowserModule` because the VE retrieves it using injection.
In Ivy the injection is optional and we have instructions instead of component definition arrays. The implication of this is that in Ivy the instructions can pull in the sanitizer only when they are working with a property which is known to be unsafe. Because the Injection is optional this works even if no Sanitizer is present. So in Ivy we first use the sanitizer which is pulled in by the instruction, unless one is available through the `Injector` then we use that one instead.
This PR does few things:
1) It makes `Sanitizer` optional in Ivy.
2) It makes `DomSanitizer` tree shakable.
3) It aligns the semantics of Ivy `Sanitizer` with that of the Ivy sanitization rules.
4) It refactors `DomSanitizer` to use same functions as Ivy sanitization for consistency.
PR Close#31934
In Angular today, the following pattern works:
```typescript
export class BaseDir {
constructor(@Inject(ViewContainerRef) protected vcr: ViewContainerRef) {}
}
@Directive({
selector: '[child]',
})
export class ChildDir extends BaseDir {
// constructor inherited from BaseDir
}
```
A decorated child class can inherit a constructor from an undecorated base
class, so long as the base class has metadata of its own (for JIT mode).
This pattern works regardless of metadata in AOT.
In Angular Ivy, this pattern does not work: without the @Directive
annotation identifying the base class as a directive, information about its
constructor parameters will not be captured by the Ivy compiler. This is a
result of Ivy's locality principle, which is the basis behind a number of
compilation optimizations.
As a solution, @Directive() without a selector will be interpreted as a
"directive base class" annotation. Such a directive cannot be declared in an
NgModule, but can be inherited from. To implement this, a few changes are
made to the ngc compiler:
* the error for a selector-less directive is now generated when an NgModule
declaring it is processed, not when the directive itself is processed.
* selector-less directives are not tracked along with other directives in
the compiler, preventing other errors (like their absence in an NgModule)
from being generated from them.
PR Close#31379
In Angular today, the following pattern works:
```typescript
export class BaseDir {
constructor(@Inject(ViewContainerRef) protected vcr: ViewContainerRef) {}
}
@Directive({
selector: '[child]',
})
export class ChildDir extends BaseDir {
// constructor inherited from BaseDir
}
```
A decorated child class can inherit a constructor from an undecorated base
class, so long as the base class has metadata of its own (for JIT mode).
This pattern works regardless of metadata in AOT.
In Angular Ivy, this pattern does not work: without the @Directive
annotation identifying the base class as a directive, information about its
constructor parameters will not be captured by the Ivy compiler. This is a
result of Ivy's locality principle, which is the basis behind a number of
compilation optimizations.
As a solution, @Directive() without a selector will be interpreted as a
"directive base class" annotation. Such a directive cannot be declared in an
NgModule, but can be inherited from. To implement this, a few changes are
made to the ngc compiler:
* the error for a selector-less directive is now generated when an NgModule
declaring it is processed, not when the directive itself is processed.
* selector-less directives are not tracked along with other directives in
the compiler, preventing other errors (like their absence in an NgModule)
from being generated from them.
PR Close#31379