Rather than de-duplicating results as we build them, a final de-duplication can be done at the end.
This way, there's no forgetting to de-duplicate results at some level.
Prior to this commit, results from template locations that mapped to
multiple different typescript locations would not be de-duplicated (e.g.
an input binding that is bound to two separate directives).
PR Close#40523
When `checkTypeOfPipes` is set to `false`, our TCB currently generates
the a statement like the following when pipes appear in the template:
`(_pipe1 as any).transform(args)`
This did enable us to get _some_ information from the Language Service
about pipes in this case because we still had access to the pipe
instance. However, because it is immediately cast to `any`, we cannot
get type information about the transform access. That means actions like "go to
definition", "find references", "quick info", etc. will return
incomplete information or fail altogether.
Instead, this commit changes the TCB to generate `(_pipe1.transform as any)(args)`.
This gives us the ability to get complete information for the LS
operations listed above.
PR Close#40523
This commit updates the logic in the LS renaming to handle renaming of
pipes, both from the name expression in the pipe metadata as well as
from the template.
The approach here is to introduce a new concept for renaming: an
"indirect" rename. In this type of rename, we find rename locations
in with the native TS Language Service using a different node than the
one we are renaming. Using pipes as an example, if we want to rename the
pipe name from the string literal expression, we use the transform
method to find rename locations rather than the string literal itself
(which will not return any results because it's just a string).
So the general approach is:
* Determine the details about the requested rename location, i.e. the
targeted template node and symbol for a template rename, or the TS
node for a rename outside a template.
* Using the details of the location, determine if the node is attempting
to rename something that is an indirect rename (pipes, selectors,
bindings). Other renames are considered "direct" and we use whatever
results the native TSLS returns for the rename locations.
* In the case of indirect renames, we throw out results that do not
appear in the templates (in this case, the shim files). These results will be
for the "indirect" rename that we don't want to touch, but are only
using to find template results.
* Create an additional rename result for the string literal expression
that is used for the input/output alias, the pipe name, or the
selector.
Note that renaming is moving towards being much more accurate in its
results than "find references". When the approach for renaming
stabilizes, we may want to then port the changes back to being shared
with the approach for retrieving references.
PR Close#40523
This commit renames the files for the references and rename functionality to indicate
that they deal with _both_ references and rename, not just references.
PR Close#40523
This commit adds support for skipping formatting in `<aio-code>`
elements (which are used by `<code-example>` and `<code-pane>` elements
under the hood) by specifying the `language` option as `'root'`.
This is useful for code-snippets that include plain text.
PR Close#41335
Currently the compiler treats `@page` rules in the same way as `@media`, however that is incorrect and it results in invalid CSS, because `@page` allows style declarations at the root (e.g. `@page (margin: 50%) {}`) and it only allows a limited set of at-rules to be nested into it. Given these restrictions, we can't really encapsulate the styles since they apply at the document level when the user tries to print.
These changes make it so that `@page` rules are preserved so that we don't break the user's CSS.
More information: https://www.w3.org/TR/css-page-3Fixes#26269.
PR Close#41915
As of v12, strict mode is the default, so you don't have
to opt in anymore. This commit removes the instructions
to add --strict to the ng new.
PR Close#41542
Content projection is an important part of Angular. However, it has
never been documented in the Angular documentation set. This topic
attempts to provide the basics of content projection for developers. It
is not a comprehensive guide; rather, it is a starting point that we
can hopefully expand upon in the future.
PR Close#41143
We recently added a sanity check that ensures that `python` is
available for Bazel. The check relies on `/usr/bin/python` to check
if python is available w/ the correct version. The problem is
that on Windows there is no guarantee that the `/usr/bin` folder
exists, so the `ng-dev release publish` command always fails.
We fix this by just accessing the `env` binary that is also consulted
by scripts executed within Bazel actions. The `env` binary can be
assumed exist in the shell's `$PATH` and can point us to Python
as if it would be executed within Bazel.
PR Close#41943
Currently we have a common utility method for running commands
in a child process. This method pipes all stdout and stderr, but sets
the `stdin` to `inherited`. This seemed to work as expected in terms of
allowing interactive commands being executed, but it messes with the
TTY in Windows (and potentially other platforms) so that colors and
prompts no longer work properly. See attached screenshot.
We fix this by not inheriting the stdin by default; but exposing
a dedicated method for interactive commands. This results in more
readable and obvious code too, so it's worth making this change
regardless of the TTY issues.
PR Close#41948
adding optional body for HTTP delete request options. This new param added as an optional so won't break the existing code also provide the capability the send the body when and where it required.
PR Close#41723
Bazel no longer recommends the use of `remote_execution_properties`
within `platform` definitions. Bazel intends to replace this attribute
with an object literal based attribute called `exec_properties`.
This simplifies the platform configuration and makes it more
readable. Additionally this make inheritance and overriding easier.
PR Close#41941
Currently if a major release-train in the `release-candidate`/`feature-freeze`
phase becomes `latest`, we intend to set the NPM LTS dist tag for all packages
of the previous major (as the old release train in `latest` moves into LTS phase).
The logic for this exists but the release tool sets the NPM dist tag for
all packages of the new major. This means that the script might error if
a new package is part of the new major; or it could cause a deleted
package to not receive the LTS tag properly.
PR Close#41946
This commit adds support for `$` in when selecting attributes.
Resolves#41244.
test(language-service): Add test to expose bug caused by source file change (#41500)
This commit adds a test to expose the bug caused by source file change in
between typecheck programs.
PR Close#41500
PR Close#41567
Some localization workflows want to use the extracted source translation
files directy back in the project as a target translation file.
The extraction process generates files that only contain "source" messages
and not "target" messages. This is actually valid for most translation formats
but currently the Angular localization process expects target translation files
to always contain target messages and will stop with an error in this case.
Now, instead of an error, the translation file loader will log a warning,
and then try to falback to a source message, only erroring if this is also
missing.
Fixes#21690
PR Close#41944
This allows the linker to be used as a true Babel plugin. In a Babel
configuration file, include the linker as follows:
```js
{
plugins: [
'@angular/compiler-cli/linker/babel',
]
}
```
or, if you need to specify configuration options:
```js
{
plugins: [
['@angular/compiler-cli/linker/babel', {linkerJitMode: true}],
]
}
```
PR Close#41918
Update the statement expressing Angular's supported versions of Node.js. Previously, we stated
that the `current` version of Node.js was supported, however Node.js's `current` version maps
more closely to what we would term a `next` branch and is not expected meant for usage with
production applications. This intention is stated on Node.js Releases page:
> Production applications should only use Active LTS or Maintenance LTS releases.
PR Close#41820