TCB generation occasionally transforms binding expressions twice, which can
result in a `BindingPipe` operation being `resolve()`'d multiple times. When
the pipe does not exist, this caused multiple OOB diagnostics to be recorded
about the missing pipe.
This commit fixes the problem by making the OOB recorder track which pipe
expressions have had diagnostics produced already, and only producing them
once per expression.
PR Close#39517
With this change we remove code which was used to support both TypeScript 3.9 and TypeScript 4.0
This code is now no longer needed because G3 is on TypeScript 4.0
PR Close#39586
As with regular Angular components, Angular elements are expected to
have their views update when inputs change.
Previously, Angular Elements views were not updated if the underlying
component used the `OnPush` change detection strategy.
This commit fixes this by calling `markForCheck()` on the component
view's `ChangeDetectorRef`.
NOTE:
This is similar to how `@angular/upgrade` does it:
3236ae0ee1/packages/upgrade/src/common/src/downgrade_component_adapter.ts (L146).
Fixes#38948
PR Close#39452
`ComponentNgElementStrategy` is supposed to call `ngOnChanges()` on the
underlying component instance if available, but not fail if the
component does not have an `ngOnChanges()` method. This works as
expected. However, the test used to verify that was invalid; i.e. the
test would pass even if `ComponentNgElementStrategy` would try to call
`ngOnChanges()` on a component without such a method.
This commit replaces the invalid test with a new one that correctly
verifies that `ComponentNgElementStrategy` does not try to call
`ngOnChanges()`.
PR Close#39452
Previously, the `componentRef` property of `FakeComponentFactory` used
in `elements` tests was initialy set to a spy object with all mock
properties defined as spied methods. Later, the properties where
overwritten to the actual mock values.
This commit simplifies the creation of `componentRef` by correctly using
the arguments of [jasmine.createSpyObj()][1] to specify the desired
shape of the spy object (separating spied properties from methods and
directly providing the mock values).
[1]: https://jasmine.github.io/api/3.5/jasmine.html#.createSpyObj
PR Close#39452
In ViewEngine, SelfSkip would navigate up the tree to get tokens from
the parent node, skipping the child. This restores that functionality in
Ivy. In ViewEngine, if a special token (e.g. ElementRef) was not found
in the NodeInjector tree, the ModuleInjector was also used to lookup
that token. While special tokens like ElementRef make sense only in a
context of a NodeInjector, we preserved ViewEngine logic for now to
avoid breaking changes.
We identified 4 scenarios related to @SkipSelf and special tokens where
ViewEngine behavior was incorrect and is likely due to bugs. In Ivy this
is implemented to provide a more intuitive API. The list of scenarios
can be found below.
1. When Injector is used in combination with @Host and @SkipSelf on the
first Component within a module and the injector is defined in the
module, ViewEngine will get the injector from the module. In Ivy, it
does not do this and throws instead.
2. When retrieving a @ViewContainerRef while @SkipSelf and @Host are
present, in ViewEngine, it throws an exception. In Ivy it returns the
host ViewContainerRef.
3. When retrieving a @ViewContainerRef on an embedded view and @SkipSelf
is present, in ViewEngine, the ref is null. In Ivy it returns the parent
ViewContainerRef.
4. When utilizing viewProviders and providers, a child component that is
nested within a parent component that has @SkipSelf on a viewProvider
value, if that provider is provided by the parent component's
viewProviders and providers, ViewEngine will return that parent's
viewProviders value, which violates how viewProviders' visibility should
work. In Ivy, it retrieves the value from providers, as it should.
These discrepancies all behave as they should in Ivy and are likely bugs
in ViewEngine.
PR Close#39464
There is a compiler transform that downlevels Angular class decorators
to static properties so that metadata is available for JIT compilation.
The transform was supposed to ignore non-Angular decorators but it was
actually completely dropping decorators that did not conform to a very
specific syntactic shape (i.e. the decorator was a simple identifier, or
a namespaced identifier).
This commit ensures that all non-Angular decorators are kepts as-is
even if they are built using a syntax that the Angular compiler does not
understand.
Fixes#39574
PR Close#39577
Rather than re-reading component metadata that was already interpreted
by the Ivy compiler, the Language Service should instead use the
compiler APIs to get information it needs about the metadata.
PR Close#39476
Tokenized text node may have leading whitespace skipped from their
source-span. But the source-span is used to compute where there are
interpolated blocks, resulting in placeholder nodes whose source-spans
are offset by the amount of skipped characters.
This fix uses the `fullStart` location of text source-spans for computing
the source-span of placeholders, so that they are accurate.
Fixes#39195
PR Close#39486
This commit ensures that when leading whitespace is skipped by
the tokenizer, the original start location (before skipping) is captured
in the `fullStart` property of the token's source-span.
PR Close#39486
The lexer is able to skip leading trivia in the `start` location of tokens.
This makes the source-span more friendly since things like elements
appear to begin at the start of the opening tag, rather than at the
start of any leading whitespace, which could include newlines.
But some tooling requires the full source-span to be available, such
as when tokenizing a text span into an Angular expression.
This commit simply adds the `fullStart` location to the `ParseSourceSpan`
class, and ensures that places where such spans are cloned, this
property flows through too.
PR Close#39486
In an i18n message, two placeholders next to each other must have
an "empty" message-part to separate them. Previously, the source-span
for this message-part was pointing to the wrong original location.
This caused problems in the generated source-maps and lead to extracted
i18n messages from being rendered incorrectly.
PR Close#39486
Close#38863
Monkey patches `queueMicrotask()` API, so the callback runs in the zone
when scheduled, and also the task is run as `microTask`.
```
Zone.current.fork({
name: 'queueMicrotask',
onScheduleTask: (delegate: ZoneDelegate, curr: Zone, target: Zone, task: Task) => {
logs.push(task.type);
logs.push(task.source);
return delegate.scheduleTask(target, task);
}
}).run(() => {
queueMicrotask(() => {
expect(logs).toEqual(['microTask', 'queueMicrotask']);
expect(Zone.current.name).toEqual('queueMicrotask');
done();
});
});
```
PR Close#38904
Prior to this commit, the `cleanUpControl` function (responsible for cleaning up control instance)
was not taking validators into account. As a result, these validators remain registered on a detached
form control instance, thus causing memory leaks. This commit updates the `cleanUpControl` function
logic to also run validators cleanup.
As a part of this change, the logic to setup and cleanup validators was refactored and moved to
separate functions (with completely opposite behavior), so that they can be reused in the future.
This commit doesn't add the `cleanUpControl` calls to all possible places, it just fixes the cases
where this function is being called, but doesn't fully perform a cleanup. The `cleanUpControl`
function calls will be added to other parts of code (to avoid more memory leaks) in a followup PR.
PR Close#39234
For consistency with other generated code, the partial declaration
functions are renamed to use the `ɵɵ` prefix which indicates that it is
generated API.
This commit also removes the declaration from the public API golden
file, as it's not yet considered stable at this point. Once the linker
is finalized will these declaration function be included into the golden
file.
PR Close#39518
This commit implements partial code generation for directives, which
will be transformed by the linker plugin to fully AOT compiled code in
follow-up work.
PR Close#39518
In PR #38938 an additional Bazel target was introduced for the compliance
tests, as preparation to run the compliance tests in partial compilation
mode and then apply the linker transform. The linker plugin itself was
not available at the time but has since been implemented, so this commit
updates the prelink target of the compliance tests to apply the linker
transform using the Babel plugin.
Actually emitting partial compilations to be transformed will be done in
follow-up work.
PR Close#39518
This introduces `AstObject.toMap` as an alternative to `AstObject
.toLiteral`, and adds `AstValue.getSymbolName` to query the symbol name
of a value using the encapsulated AST host.
PR Close#39518
When a class with a custom decorator is transpiled to ES5, it looks something like this:
```
var SomeClass = (function() {
function SomeClass() {...};
var SomeClass_1 = __decorate([Decorator()], SomeClass);
SomeClass = SomeClass_1;
return SomeClass;
})();
```
The problem is that if the class also has an Angular decorator that refers to the class itself
(e.g. `{provide: someToken, useClass: SomeClass}`), the generated `setClassMetadata` code will
be emitted after the IIFE, but will still refer to the intermediate `SomeClass_1` variable from
inside the IIFE. This happens, because we generate the `setClassMetadata` call directly from
the source AST which contains identifiers that TS will rename when it emits the ES5 code.
These changes resolve the issue by looking through the metadata AST and cloning any `Identifier`
that is referring to the class. Since TS doesn't have references to the clone, it won't rename
it when transpiling to ES5.
Fixes#39509.
PR Close#39527
Alex Eagle wrote an external article on our decision to move Bazel out of
Angular repo, and it's useful for users who want to know more about what's next.
PR Close#39507
This commit takes the `HybridVisitor` in the language service and gives it
the ability to return not just a node but the template context in which it
appears. In the future, more context regarding where a node appears in the
template might become necessary (ex: the microsyntax container for binding
nodes), and this refactoring enables that.
In the process, `HybridVisitor` is renamed and the concept of a
`TemplateTarget` interface is introduced to contain the results of this
operation.
PR Close#39505
This commit refactors the QuickInfo abstraction shared between the VE and
Ivy services and used to implement hover tooltips (quick info), which was
extracted from the VE code in commit faa81dc. The new DisplayParts
abstraction is more general and can be used to extract information needed by
various LS functions (e.g. autocompletion).
This commit effectively reverts faa81dc, returning the original code to the
VE implementation as the Ivy code is now diverged.
PR Close#39505
When registering an NgModule based on its id, all transitively imported
NgModules are also registered. This commit introduces a visited set to
avoid traversing into NgModules that are reachable from multiple import
paths multiple times.
Fixes#39487
PR Close#39514
The variable declaration for a template context is only needed when it
is referenced from somewhere, so the TCB operation to generate the
declaration is marked as optional.
PR Close#39321
When there is a primary outlet present in the outlets map and the object is also prefixed
with some other commands, the current logic only uses the primary outlet and ignores
the others. This change ensures that all outlets are respected at the
segment level when prefixed with other commands.
PR Close#39456
This commit has a small refactor of some methods in create_url_tree.ts
and adds some test cases, including two that will fail at the moment but
should pass. A follow-up commit will make use of the refactorings to fix
the test with minimal changes.
PR Close#39456
Currently expressions `$event.foo()` and `this.$event.foo()`, as well as `$any(foo)` and
`this.$any(foo)`, are treated as the same expression by the compiler, because `this` is considered
the same implicit receiver as when the receiver is omitted. This introduces the following issues:
1. Any time something called `$any` is used, it'll be stripped away, leaving only the first parameter.
2. If something called `$event` is used anywhere in a template, it'll be preserved as `$event`,
rather than being rewritten to `ctx.$event`, causing the value to undefined at runtime. This
applies to listener, property and text bindings.
These changes resolve the first issue and part of the second one by preserving anything that
is accessed through `this`, even if it's one of the "special" ones like `$any` or `$event`.
Furthermore, these changes only expose the `$event` global variable inside event listeners,
whereas previously it was available everywhere.
Fixes#30278.
PR Close#39323
This commit updates the week-numbering year format from `r` -> `Y` based on the description in
http://www.unicode.org/reports/tr35/tr35-dates.html#dfst-year.
Note: this is not a breaking change, since the week-numbering year format was introduced in
v11.0.0-next.3 (984ed39195)
and the major version that contains that change was not released yet.
PR Close#39495
The Language Service is not only interested in external resources, but
also inline styles and templates. By storing the expression of the
inline resources, we can more easily determine if a given position is
part of the inline template/style expression.
PR Close#39482
To support recovery of malformed binding property names like `([a)`,
`[a`, or `()`, the binding parser needs to be more permissive w.r.t. the
kinds of bindings it can detect. This is difficult to do maintainably
with a regex, but is trivial with a "hand-rolled" string parser. This
commit refactors render3's binding attribute parsing to use this method
for multi-delimited bindings (namely via the `()`, `[]`, and `[()]`)
syntax, making the way recovery of malformed bindings in a future patch.
Note that we can keep using a regex for prefix-only binding syntax
(e.g. `bind-`, `ref-`) because validation of the binding is complete
once we have matched the prefix, and the only thing left to do is check
that the binding identifier is non-empty, which is trivial.
Part of #38596
PR Close#39375
This commit updates the docs for the `tView.preOrderHooks` and `tView.preOrderCheckHooks` TView
fields. Current docs are not up-to-date as it was pointed out in #39439.
Closes#39439.
PR Close#39497
This is follow-up from [an earlier discussion](https://github.com/angular/angular/pull/39408#discussion_r511908358).
After some testing, it looks like the type of `Element.attributes` was correct in specifying that it
only has `TextAttribute` instances. This means that the extra checks that filter out `BoundAttribute`
instances from the array isn't necessary. There is another loop a bit further down that actually
extracts the bound i18n attributes.
PR Close#39498
Close#39296
Fix an issue that `markDirty()` will not trigger change detection.
The case is for example we have the following component.
```
export class AppComponent implements OnInit {
constructor(private router: Router) {}
ngOnInit() {
this.router.events
.pipe(filter((e) => e instanceof NavigationEnd))
.subscribe(() => ɵmarkDirty(this));
}
}
export class CounterComponent implements OnInit, OnDestroy {
ngOnInit() {
this.countSubject.pipe(takeUntil(this.destroy)).subscribe((count) => {
this.count = count;
ɵmarkDirty(this);
});
}
```
Then the app navigate from `AppComponent` to `CounterComponent`,
so there are 2 `markDirty()` call at in a row.
The `1st` call is from `AppComponent` when router changed, the
`2nd` call is from `CounterComponent.ngOnInit()`.
And the `markDirty()->scheduleTick()` code look like this
```
function scheduleTick(rootContext, flags) {
const nothingScheduled = rootContext.flags === 0 /* Empty */;
rootContext.flags |= flags;
if (nothingScheduled && rootContext.clean == _CLEAN_PROMISE) {
rootContext.schedule(() => {
...
if (rootContext.flags & RootContextFlags.DetectChanges)
rootContext.flags &= ~RootContextFlags.DetectChanges;
tickContext();
rootContext.clean = _CLEAN_PROMISE;
...
});
```
So in this case, the `1st` markDirty() will
1. set rootContext.flags = 1
2. before `tickContext()`, reset rootContext.flags = 0
3. inside `tickContext()`, it will call `CounterComponent.ngOnint()`,
so the `2nd` markDirty() is called.
4. and the `2nd` scheduleTick is called, `nothingScheduled` is true,
but rootContext.clean is not `_CLEAN_PROMISE` yet, since the `1st` markDirty tick
is still running.
5. So nowhere will reset the `rootContext.flags`.
6. then in the future, any other `markDirty()` call will not trigger the tick, since
`nothingScheduled` is always false.
So `nothingScheduled` means no tick is scheduled, `rootContext.clean === _CLEAN_PROMISE`
means no tick is running.
So we should set the flags to `rootContext` only when `no tick is scheudled or running`.
PR Close#39316
This commit handles the following cases:
- incomplete pipes in a pipe chain
- incomplete arguments in a pipe chain
- incomplete arguments provided to a pipe
- nested pipes
The idea is to unconditionally recover on the presence of a pipe, which
should be okay because expression parsing can be independently between
pipes.
PR Close#39437
Angular-internal type definitions for Trusted Types were added in #39211.
When compiled using the Closure compiler with certain optimization
flags, identifiers from these type definitions (such as createPolicy)
are currently uglified and renamed to shorter strings. This causes
Angular applications compiled in this way to fail to create a Trusted
Types policy, and fall bock to using strings.
To fix this, mark the internal Trusted Types definitions as declarations
using the "declare" keyword. Also convert types to interfaces, for
the reasons explained in https://ncjamieson.com/prefer-interfaces/
PR Close#39471
This commit improves the ngModel docs, specifically:
- clarifies purpose of the name attribute in ngModelOptions
- clarifies on the interaction with a parent form or lack thereof
- fix inconsistency with analogy for two-way binding
- cleans up some typos and extra wordiness
- clarifies language around common properties
- adds missing preposition to commit message format origins
PR Close#39481
In the current release doc, we are using some shortcut of `git` command
such as `git ci` `git co`, so in this PR we are updating them
to the normal command, so these commands will work event without
these shortcuts.
PR Close#39442
In addition to the template mapping that already existed, we want to also track the mapping for external
style files. We also store the `ts.Expression` in the registry so external tools can look up a resource
on a component by expression and avoid reading the value.
PR Close#39373
adds RuntimeError and code enum to improve debugging experience
refactor ExpressionChangedAfterItHasBeenCheckedError to code NG0100
refactor CyclicDependency to code NG0200
refactor No Provider to code NG0201
refactor MultipleComponentsMatch to code NG0300
refactor ExportNotFound to code NG0301
refactor PipeNotFound to code NG0302
refactor BindingNotKnown to code NG0303
refactor NotKnownElement to code NG0304
PR Close#39188
This commit refactors validators-related logic that is common across most of the directives.
A couple notes on this refactoring:
* common logic was moved to the `AbstractControlDirective` class (including `validator` and
`asyncValidator` getters)
* sync/async validators are now composed in `AbstractControlDirective` class eagerly when validators
are set with `_setValidators` and `_setAsyncValidators` calls and the result is stored in directive
instance (thus getters return cached versions of validator fn). This is needed to make sure composed
validator function remains the same (retains its identity) for a given directive instance, so that
this function can be added and later removed from an instance of an AbstractControl-based class
(like `FormControl`). Preserving validator function is required to perform proper cleanup (in followup
PRs) of the AbstractControl-based classes when a directive is destroyed.
PR Close#38280