This change aligns behavior for resolvers which return EMPTY. Currently EMPTY resolvers have inconsistent behavior:
- One resolver that returns EMPTY => won't navigate and just ends on ResolveStart router event.
- Two resolvers where both return EMPTY => throws "Error: Uncaught (in promise): EmptyError: no elements in sequence"
- Two resolvers where one returns a value and the other one returns EMPTY => Navigates successfully.
With this change any EMPTY resolver will cancel navigation.
BREAKING CHANGE: Any resolver which return EMPTY will cancel navigation.
If you want to allow the navigation to continue, you will need to update the resolvers to emit
some value, (i.e. defaultIfEmpty(...), of(...), etc).
PR Close#24195
PR Close#24621
Previously it was not possible to provide `CacheQueryOptions` ([MDN](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/Cache)) for querying the Cache.
This commit introduces a new parameter called `cacheQueryOptions` for `DataGroup` and `AssetGroup`.
Currently only `ignoreSearch` is supported as `ignoreVary` and `ignoreMethod` would require using
the complete Request object for matching which is not possible with the current implementation.
Closes#28443
PR Close#34663
Correct typo in the router docs, changing "as your app growns" to "as your app grows". Previously the wrong spelling was used and this commit rectifies this.
PR Close#36786
link is very deep down on architecture page this commit is part of a larger effort to standardise ownload sections on angular.io
This commit partially addresses #35459
PR Close#36565
link is very deep down on acessibility page this commit is part of a larger effort to standardise ownload sections on angular.io
This commit partially addresses #35459
PR Close#36561
Version 7.0.0 is under LTS until 18-4-2020 removed it from the table which showed it as LTS and added to versions that are no longer under support.
PR Close#36708
In "Getting started" guide pipes are not intoduced anywhere but are used in the guide.
Added refrence to pipes for better consistency in the tutorial.
Fixes#36375
PR Close#36584
This rewrite changes headings to focus on user tasks rather than features,
verifies that content is up-to-date and complete, removes colloquial phrases,
adds prerequisites, and expands on a task-based section in the beginning
(a quick reference).
PR Close#35566
In the past, server-side rendered apps needed to convert URLs used in
API requests to absolute when rendering on the server. Originally, this
was handled in the `universal` guide and corresponding example app by
modifying the `HeroService` to use `APP_BASE_HREF` to derive the
absolute URL.
In #28956, the guide was updated to show an improved method: Specifying
an `HttpInterceptor` that took care of converting the URLs to absolute.
That interceptor was only provided when rendering the app on the server.
By mistake, the corresponding example app was not updated along with the
guide.
Since `@nguniversal/*` v7.1.0, it is no longer necessary to convert the
URLs to absolute inside the app. This is handled in the `@nguniversal`
libs (see angular/universal#897).
This commit updates the example app to remove unnecessary code and
modifies the guide to mention the issue with absolute URLs, but explain
that developers only need to worry about it when not using one of the
`@nguniversal/*-engine` packages.
PR Close#36483
Previously, there were no tests for the `universal` docs example. This
meant that the project was not tested at all (not even ensuring that it
can be built successfully).
This commit adds e2e tests for the `universal` example (ported from
`toh-pt6` and cleaned up) and also verifies that the project can be
built successfully (including the server).
PR Close#36483
As mentioned in the `universal` guide, the `toh-pt6` examples is the
starting poitn for the `universal` example. However, the two examples
had become out-of-sync, because some fixes/changes were made to the
Tour-of-Heroes examples.
This commit ports these changes to the `universal` example.
PR Close#36483
Each docs example has an `example-config.json` configuration file. Among
other things, this file can be used to specify what commands to run in
order to test the example. (If not specified, the `run-example-e2e.js`
script will run a default `yarn e2e` command.)
Previously, the property specifying the test commands was called `e2e`.
This is because in the past only e2e tests were run for docs examples.
Since recently, some examples may specify commands for other types of
tests (such as unit tests). Therefore, calling the property that holds
the list of test commands `e2e` no longer makes sense and can be
misleading to people looking at the configuration files.
This commit renamed the property to the more generic `tests`. In the
future, the `run-example-e2e.js` script (and corresponding npm script)
should be renamed and refactored to also avoid giving the impression
that only e2e tests are run.
Discussed in:
https://github.com/angular/angular/pull/36143#discussion_r395148379
PR Close#36143
The `core-js` dependency is no longer included in `package.json` for
`cli`-type examples, but only for the `systemjs` ones. This commit
updates the `package.json` templates to reflect that (and also updates
the `npm-packages` guide accordingly).
PR Close#36143
Previously, only e2e tests were run for docs examples on CI. As a
result, unit tests (which are included in the zipped archives we provide
for users to download and play with the examples locally) were often
outdated and broken.
This commit configures specific docs examples that have meaningful unit
tests to run them on CI (via the `run-example-e2e.js` script). Where
necessary, the unit tests are fixed to ensure they pass and reflect the
changes in the corresponding component/service.
This commit also removes some auto-generated unit tests that are not
meaningful (e.g. make trivial assertions, such that a component instance
is truthy) and are often broken anyway (e.g. because the corresponding
component has been changed in ways that make the tests fail).
PR Close#36143
Previously, the download link to the example for the angular element
guide was in the middle of the page. To make it easier for the user to
find the download link, it has been placed to the top of the page.
This commit partially addresses #35459
PR Close#36067
Since the livestream for ng-conf is not public this year,
(and is only available to ng-conf attendees), we are
removing the link from the angular.io homepage.
Instead, we are now pointing to the ng-conf homepage for
more information.
PR Close#36382