The current logic in the compiler is to bail when there are errors when
parsing a template into an HTML AST or when there are errors in the i18n
metadata. As a result, a template with these types of parse errors
_will not have any information for the language service_. This is because we
never attempt to conver the HTML AST to a template AST in these
scenarios, so there are no template AST nodes for the language service
to look at for information. In addition, this also means that the errors
are never displayed in the template to the user because there are no
nodes to map the error to.
This commit adds an option to the template parser to temporarily ignore
the html parse and i18n meta errors and always perform the template AST
conversion. At the end, the i18n and HTML parse errors are appended to
the returned errors list. While this seems risky, it at least provides
us with more information than we had before (which was 0) and it's only
done in the context of the language service, when the compiler is
configured to use poisoned data (HTML parse and i18n meta errors can be
interpreted as a "poisoned" template).
fixes angular/vscode-ng-language-service#1140
PR Close#41068
Adds an error if a reference is used more than once on the same element (e.g. `<div #a #a>`).
We used to have this error in ViewEngine, but it wasn't ported over to Ivy.
Fixes#40536.
PR Close#40538
Now when the animation trigger output event is missing its phase value name, the `BoundEvent` will be ignored,
but it's useful for completion in language service.
PR Close#39925
The only test case for `ngFor` exercises an incorrect usage which causes
two bound attributes to be generated . This commit adds a canonical and
correct usage to show the difference between the two.
PR Close#35671
Currently, would-be binding attributes that are missing binding names
are not parsed as bindings, and fall through as regular attributes. In
some cases, this can lead to a runtime error; trying to assign `#` as a
DOM attribute in an element like in `<div #></div>` fails because `#` is
not a valid attribute name.
Attributes composed of binding prefixes but not defining a binding
should be considered invalid, as this almost certainly indicates an
unintentional elision of a binding by the developer. This commit
introduces error reporting for attributes with a binding name prefix but
no actual binding name.
Closes https://github.com/angular/vscode-ng-language-service/issues/293.
PR Close#34595
Change the Element constructor in r3_ast to create a new ParseSourceSpan when regenerating it rather than extending an object, which does not contain the overloaded toString().
PR Close#31190
The content projection mechanism is static, in that it only looks at the static
template nodes before directives are matched and change detection is run.
When you have a selector-based content projection the selection is based
on nodes that are available in the template.
For example:
```
<ng-content selector="[some-attr]"></ng-content>
```
would match
```
<div some-attr="..."></div>
```
If you have an inline-template in your projected nodes. For example:
```
<div *ngIf="..." some-attr="..."></div>
```
This gets pre-parsed and converted to a canonical form.
For example:
```
<ng-template [ngIf]="...">
<div some-attr=".."></div>
</ng-template>
```
Note that only structural attributes (e.g. `*ngIf`) stay with the `<ng-template>`
node. The other attributes move to the contained element inside the template.
When this happens in ivy, the ng-template content is removed
from the component template function and is compiled into its own
template function. But this means that the information about the
attributes that were on the content are lost and the projection
selection mechanism is unable to match the original
`<div *ngIf="..." some-attr>`.
This commit adds support for this in ivy. Attributes are separated into three
groups (Bindings, Templates and "other"). For inline-templates the Bindings
and "other" types are hoisted back from the contained node to the `template()`
instruction, so that they can be used in content projection matching.
PR Close#29041
During build time we remap particular property bindings, because their names don't match their attribute equivalents (e.g. the property for the `for` attribute is called `htmlFor`). This breaks down if the particular element has an input that has the same name, because the property gets mapped to something invalid.
The following changes address the issue by mapping the name during runtime, because that's when directives are resolved and we know all of the inputs that are associated with a particular element.
PR Close#28765
Prior to this change `projectDef` instructions were placed to root templates only, thus the necessary information (selectors) in nested templates was missing. This update adds the logic to insert `projectDef` instructions to all templates where <ng-content> is present.
PR Close#27384