@petebacondarwin deserves credit for most of this commit.
This allows you to specify a regex and serializer function instead
of the path DSL in your route declaration.
```
@RouteConfig([
{ regex: '[a-z]+.[0-9]+',
serializer: (params) => `{params.a}.params.b}`,
component: MyComponent }
])
class Component {}
```
Closes#7325Closes#7126
Despite local testing, multiple users failed to run the postinstall to install typings.
Instead, we can distribute the typings we installed locally.
This is an alternative to #7003.
This also reverts rxjs to beta.1 since we have errors using beta.2, being addressed
in #7001.
Fixes#7000
This resolves Duplicate Identifier issues seen by many users,
at the expense of more typings installation required in some
cases.
Removes the quickstart hack of placing all needed dependencies
typings files in our distribution. Removes dependencies on
nodejs from angular2/core.
Fixes#5973Fixes#5807Fixes#6266
Angular now depends on es6-promise and es6-collections
(and a handful of manual typings) rather than all of es6-shim.
Fixes#5242
We previously had an undocumented breaking change, this is now
documented in this commit.
Fixes#6817
BREAKING CHANGE:
Transitive typings are no longer included in the distribution.
You may need to install typings in your project using
http://github.com/typings/typings
Users now must rely on getting typings from:
- one of the peerDependencies, such as rxjs, which exposes
typings via the moduleResolution=node mechanism.
(see https://github.com/Microsoft/TypeScript/wiki/Typings-for-npm-packages)
This happens automatically.
- Using --target ES5 now requires manual installation of
es6-promise and es6-collections typings.
- Using some angular APIs may introduce a dependency on eg. nodejs
or jasmine, and those typings need manual installation as well.
Closes#6267
With providers split into bundles, the test injector is now able to
use providers for a given bundle. Suggested provider lists for tests are
available in `angular2/platform/testing/<platform>`.
Change the providers for a test suite using `setBaseTestProviders`. This
should be done once at the start of the test suite, before any test cases
run.
BREAKING CHANGE: Tests are now required to use `setBaseTestProviders`
to set up. Assuming your tests are run on a browser, setup would change
as follows.
Before:
```js
// Somewhere in test setup
import {BrowserDomAdapter} from 'angular2/src/platform/browser/browser_adapter';
BrowserDomAdapter.makeCurrent
```
After:
```js
// Somewhere in the test setup
import {setBaseTestProviders} from 'angular2/testing';
import {
TEST_BROWSER_PLATFORM_PROVIDERS,
TEST_BROWSER_APPLICATION_PROVIDERS
} from 'angular2/platform/testing/browser';
setBaseTestProviders(TEST_BROWSER_PLATFORM_PROVIDERS,
TEST_BROWSER_APPLICATION_PROVIDERS);
```
Closes#5351, Closes#5585Closes#5975
BREAKING CHANGE
Before
Previously Angular would run in dev prod mode by default, and you could enable the dev mode by calling enableDevMode.
After
Now, Angular runs in the dev mode by default, and you can enable the prod mode by calling enableProdMode.
BREAKING CHANGE:
Previously `angular2.js`, `angular2.min.js` and `angular2.dev.js` bundles
would have zone.js and reflect-metadata pre-appended. New bundles don't
contain zone.js nor reflect-metadata - those external dependencies can
be easily loaded into a browser using `angular2-polyfills.js`
Closes#5881
Closes#5815Closes#5844
BREAKING CHANGE:
`angular2/angular2` was removed. Use the correct import from one of the barrels. E.g. `angular2/core`, `angular2/platform/browser`, `angular2/common`, …
Note: This only applies to JavaScript, Dart is not changed.
Assets defined for `templateUrl` and `styleUrls` can now be loaded
in relative to where the component file is placed so long as the
`moduleId` is set within the component annotation.
Closes#5634
Assets defined for `templateUrl` and `styleUrls` can now be loaded
in relative to where the component file is placed so long as the
`moduleId` is set within the component annotation.
Closes#5634Closes#5634
Have DomElementSchemaRegistry support namespaced elements,
so that it does not fail when directives are applied in SVG (or xlink).
Without this fix, directives or property bindings cannot be
used in SVG.
Related to #5547Closes#5653
Currently, importing from 'angular2/angular2', in addition to providing Angular tokens, brings in global-es6.d.ts. Since we are deprecating 'angular2/angular2', we need to do the same in 'angular2/core'.
move to new RxJS distribution.
BREAKING CHANGE:
RxJS imports now are via `rxjs` instead of `@reactivex/rxjs`
Individual operators can be imported `import 'rxjs/operators/map'`
This is a big change. @matsko also deserves much of the credit for the implementation.
Previously, `ComponentInstruction`s held all the state for async components.
Now, we introduce several subclasses for `Instruction` to describe each type of navigation.
BREAKING CHANGE:
Redirects now use the Link DSL syntax. Before:
```
@RouteConfig([
{ path: '/foo', redirectTo: '/bar' },
{ path: '/bar', component: BarCmp }
])
```
After:
```
@RouteConfig([
{ path: '/foo', redirectTo: ['Bar'] },
{ path: '/bar', component: BarCmp, name: 'Bar' }
])
```
BREAKING CHANGE:
This also introduces `useAsDefault` in the RouteConfig, which makes cases like lazy-loading
and encapsulating large routes with sub-routes easier.
Previously, you could use `redirectTo` like this to expand a URL like `/tab` to `/tab/posts`:
@RouteConfig([
{ path: '/tab', redirectTo: '/tab/users' }
{ path: '/tab', component: TabsCmp, name: 'Tab' }
])
AppCmp { ... }
Now the recommended way to handle this is case is to use `useAsDefault` like so:
```
@RouteConfig([
{ path: '/tab', component: TabsCmp, name: 'Tab' }
])
AppCmp { ... }
@RouteConfig([
{ path: '/posts', component: PostsCmp, useAsDefault: true, name: 'Posts' },
{ path: '/users', component: UsersCmp, name: 'Users' }
])
TabsCmp { ... }
```
In the above example, you can write just `['/Tab']` and the route `Users` is automatically selected as a child route.
Closes#4728Closes#4228Closes#4170Closes#4490Closes#4694Closes#5200Closes#5475
BREAKING CHANGE
Before
import * as p from 'angular2/profile';
import * as t from 'angular2/tools';
After
import * as p from 'angular2/instrumentation';
import * as t from 'angular2/platform/browser';
All common directives, forms, and pipes have been moved out of angular2/core,
but we kept reexporting them to make transition easier.
This commit removes the reexports.
BREAKING CHANGE
Before
import {NgIf} from 'angular2/core';
After
import {NgIf} from 'angular2/common';
Closes#5362
Currently, core depends on DomRenderer, which depends on the browser.
This means that if you depend on angular2/core, you will always
pull in the browser dom adapter and the browser render, regardless
if you need them or not.
This PR moves the browser dom adapter and the browser renderer out of core.
BREAKING CHANGE
If you import browser adapter or dom renderer directly (not via angular2/core),
you will have to change the import path.
Since editors and IDEs do typechecking and show errors in place,
often there is no benefit to running type checking in our test pipeline.
This PR allows you to disable type checking:
gulp test.unit.js --noTypeChecks
This commit also makes es6 generation optional.
fix(build): removes unnecessary circular dependencies
Closes#5299
we can now filter build graph via --project flag to speed up build performance
usage:
gulp test.unit.js --project=angular2,angular2_material
Closes#5272
this is handy to conditionally create build graph but keep mergeTree() declarative - any input tree passed into
mergeTree that is null or undefined will simply be ignored
Currently, core depends on the browser, which means that other platforms (e.g., NativeScript or webworker) cannot use the bootstrapping logic core provides.
This PR extract makes bootstrapping logic in core completely platform-independent. The browser-specific code was moved to "angular2/platforms/browser".
BREAKING CHANGE
A few private helpers (e.g., platformCommon or applicationCommon) were removed or replaced with other helpers. Look at PLATFORM_COMMON_PROVIDERS, APPLICATION_COMMON_PROVIDERS, BROWSER_PROVIDERS, BROWSER_APP_PROVIDERS to see if they export the providers you need.
Closes#5219Closes#5280
Currently, core depends on the browser, which means that other platforms (e.g., NativeScript or webworker) cannot use the bootstrapping logic core provides.
This PR extract makes bootstrapping logic in core completely platform-independent. The browser-specific code was moved to "angular2/platforms/browser".
BREAKING CHANGE
A few private helpers (e.g., platformCommon or applicationCommon) were removed or replaced with other helpers. Look at PLATFORM_COMMON_PROVIDERS, APPLICATION_COMMON_PROVIDERS, BROWSER_PROVIDERS, BROWSER_APP_PROVIDERS to see if they export the providers you need.
Closes#5219
This is part of ongoing work to make core platform-independent.
BREAKING CHANGE
All private exports from 'angular2/src/core/facade/{lang,collection,exception_handler}' should be replaced with 'angular2/src/facade/{lang,collection,exception_handler}'.