In #33046, internal uses of `zone.js` were switched to reference it
directly from source (built with Bazel) instead of npm. As a result, the
necessary scripts were updated to build `zone.js` as necessary. However,
some `integration/**/debug-test.sh` scripts were missed (apparently
because they are not used on CI, but only locally as helpers for
debugging the integration projects).
This commit updates the `scripts/build-packages-dist.sh` script to also
build `zone.js`, so that other scripts (such as the various
`debug-test.sh` scripts) can use it.
PR Close#33733
The `localize-translate` command line tool can now accept an array of
target locales to support the case where translation files do not
contain them. Specify this array via the `--target-locales` option.
NOTE to early adopters: in order to support this, the original `-t`
option for the binary has changed from being a glob pattern to an array
of paths, which will have matching indices to any provided target-locales.
PR Close#33381
Add a new flag to `localize-translate` that allows the
source locale to be specified. When this locale is
provided an extra copy of the files is made for this
locale where the is no translation but all the calls to
`$localize` are stripped out.
Resolves FW-1623
PR Close#33101
The new CLI build pipeline will automatically downlevel
ES2015 to ES5 if the tsconfig compilation is set to
ES2015.
This change ensures that the compile-time inlining of
translations handles both the ES2015 code and the
downleveled ES5 code.
PR Close#33097
For v9 we want the migration to the new i18n to be as
simple as possible.
Previously the developer had to positively choose to use
legacy messsage id support in the case that their translation
files had not been migrated to the new format by setting the
`legacyMessageIdFormat` option in tsconfig.json to the format
of their translation files.
Now this setting has been changed to `enableI18nLegacyMessageFormat`
as is a boolean that defaults to `true`. The format is then read from
the `i18nInFormat` option, which was previously used to trigger translations
in the pre-ivy angular compiler.
PR Close#33053
This commit implements a tool that will inline translations and generate
a translated copy of a set of application files from a set of translation
files.
PR Close#32881
This is a refactoring that moves the source code around to provide a better
platform for adding the compile-time inlining.
1. Move the global side-effect import from the primary entry-point to a
secondary entry-point @angular/localize/init.
This has two benefits: first it allows the top level entry-point to
contain tree-shakable shareable code; second it gives the side-effect
import more of an "action" oriented name, which indicates that importing
it does something tangible
2. Move all the source code into the top src folder, and import the localize
related functions into the localize/init/index.ts entry-point.
This allows the different parts of the package to share code without
a proliferation of secondary entry-points (i.e. localize/utils).
3. Avoid publicly exporting any utilities at this time - the only public
API at this point are the global `$localize` function and the two runtime
helpers `loadTranslations()` and `clearTranslations()`.
This does not mean that we will not expose additional helpers for 3rd
party tooling in the future, but it avoid us preemptively exposing
something that we might want to change in the near future.
Notes:
It is not possible to have the `$localize` code in the same Bazel package
as the rest of the code. If we did this, then the bundled `@angular/localize/init`
entry-point code contains all of the helper code, even though most of it is not used.
Equally it is not possible to have the `$localize` types (i.e. `LocalizeFn`
and `TranslateFn`) defined in the `@angular/localize/init` entry-point because
these types are needed for the runtime code, which is inside the primary
entry-point. Importing them from `@angular/localize/init` would run the
side-effect.
The solution is to have a Bazel sub-package at `//packages/localize/src/localize`
which contains these types and the `$localize` function implementation.
The primary `//packages/localize` entry-point imports the types without
any side-effect.
The secondary `//packages/localize/init` entry-point imports the `$localize`
function and attaches it to the global scope as a side-effect, without
bringing with it all the other utility functions.
BREAKING CHANGES:
The entry-points have changed:
* To attach the `$localize` function to the global scope import from
`@angular/localize/init`. Previously it was `@angular/localize`.
* To access the `loadTranslations()` and `clearTranslations()` functions,
import from `@angular/localize`. Previously it was `@angular/localize/run_time`.
PR Close#32488
This test uses localization in the `AppComponent` component:
* an `i18n` attribute in the template
* a call to the `$localize` tag in the component constructor
PR Close#31609