You can generate docs for comsumption by the angular.io website by running:
```bash
gulp docs/angular.io
```
The generated docs can be found in `dist/angular.io`
components:
- gulp test.unit.broccoli task
- mock-fs for mocking our FS in unit tests
- jasmine d.ts file for type checking
jasmine lib is provided by minijasmine2 so we don't need to include it explicitly
This change solves several problems:
- the broccoli pipeline is used to compile the node/cjs tree upon any change to the modules/ directory
- jasmine tests run in a new process removing the need to clean up environment after each test
- since we transpile only those test files that are actually needed for node/cjs build, we transpile less and don't need to filter out tests
Adds a gulp task which builds the .ts files (in the cjs build only).
The new files have extension .ts since they are now valid typescript.
Unfortunately until Typescript can emit System.require, we have to keep the old .es6 version
so traceur works inside the Karma preprocessor. This should be fixed soon.
This uses tsd to fetch the typings from another git repo. I've forked the DefinitelyTyped repo because some typings we use are not available upstream.
We should probably fork it in the Angular org, so everyone on the team has commit access to our DefinitelyTyped fork.
This only transpiles one package to start with: di/
It ensures that package transpiles without errors, so no one can
introduce non-TypeScript syntax.
Next step is to widen the task inputs to cover additional packages.
See design doc for the migration:
https://docs.google.com/document/d/14RJLhu6uuv7NchFkAb6PKzOOO0L7l3Z507eKWzkEUhQ/edit
A convenience task 'ts2dart' is added for developing ts2dart, and
it runs all of the angular code through the transpiler to collect errors.
* `npm install` now does a full install; auxiliary installation steps
have been integrated into the `postinstall` script.
* Updated developer docs `DEVELOPER.md` accordingly; also added
instructions to dev docs for performing full tests (via `npm test`) --
same as those run on Travis.
* Reorg in tests so that JS tests can run without a Dart env.
Partly fixes#945 **under the assumption that when running JS tests
locally, `ChromeCanary` is the desired browser to use**. Note that CI
tests (Travis) still uses `DartiumWithWebPlatform` across the board
(Maybe because ChromeCanary isn't being installed?)
Fixes#1012.
Closes#1010