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
This will send bundle sizes (before and after gzip) to Google Analytics so that we can
track bundle size over time for every bundle we produce.
Closes#5294
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}'.
BREAKING CHANGE
All private exports from 'angular2/src/core/{directives,pipes,forms}' should be replaced with 'angular2/src/common/{directives,pipes,formis}'
Closes#5153
Previously if the URL changed in `HashLocation` mode, the router would not pick up the change.
This adds a listener in `HashLocationStrategy` for `hashchange` events to fix the problem.
Closes#5013
Refactor EventEmitter and Async Facade to match ES7 Observable semantics, properly use RxJS typedefs, make EventEmitter inherit from RxJS Subject. Closes#4149.
BREAKING CHANGE:
- consumers of EventEmitter no longer need to call .toRx()
- EventEmitter is now generic and requires a type - e.g. `EventEmitter<string>`
- EventEmitter and Observable now use the `.subscribe(generatorOrNext, error, complete)` method instead of `.observer(generator)`
- ObservableWrapper uses `callNext/callError/callComplete` instead of `callNext/callThrow/callReturn`
Since the very first npm install is called while node_modules is empty, we need to ignore it, but we can track
the start timestamp and record the install even once the installation is completed.
We've had issues such as the one I documented: https://github.com/Microsoft/TypeScript/issues/5187
This tslint check prevents this happening again.
This change also updates to the newest tslint which gets typings from npm.
Closes#4970
- fixes wrapping for object literal keys called `template`.
- spacing in destructuring expressions.
- changes to keep trailing return types of functions closer to their
function declaration.
- better formatting of string literals.
Closes#4828
The directory contains code authored in a style that makes it transpilable to dart. As such, these are not idiomatic examples of Angular 2 usage.
The main purpose of this directory is to enable experimentation with Angular within the angular/angular repository.
Closes#4342Closes#4639
Adds test adapters for TypeScript and JavaScript only, exported
as part of the test_lib module. These work with the Jasmine test
framework, and allow use of the test injector within test blocks
via the `inject` function.
See #4572, #4177, #4035, #2783
This includes the TestComponentBuilder. It allows using the
test injector with Jasmine bindings, and waits for returned
promises before completing async test blocks.
This is pretty experimental, but the goal is to track the performance
of our build over time so that we can more easily track perf regressions.
Currently it's integrated only with gulp tasks, but I'd like to expand it
to tracking travis jobs, protractor/benchpress test runs, npm installs, etc.
No PII is being collected. And the data is collected via a Google Analytics
property owned by the Angular team account.
Closes#4672
This allows TypeScript to produce an API surface which matches the Dart semantics.
I found these with:
gulp build.js.dev && find dist/js/dev/es5/angular2/src -name "*.d.ts" -exec grep -H -n '^ *_' {} \;
Closes#4638
mock-fs is currently incompatible with node 4.x, but a fix is in progress
https://github.com/tschaub/mock-fs/issues/59
Since we are currently not actively developing the affected broccoli plugins,
the risk of disabling these tests is low, especially in the light of
improvements we get from node 4.x.