Currently the migration is unable to migrate instances where
the provider definition uses `forwardRef`. Since this is a
common pattern, we should support that from within the migration.
The solution to the problem is adding a foreign function resolver
to the `PartialEvaluator`. This basically matches the usage of
the static evaluation that is used by the ngtsc annotations.
PR Close#33286
this makes running and profiling tests much easier. Example usage:
```
yarn bazel run --define=compile=aot //packages/core/test/render3/perf:noop_change_detection
```
See README.md update for more info.
PS: I considered moving the ng_rollup bundle into the macro but I didn't want to make
too many changes in this PR. If we find running benchmarks in this way useful, we
should refactor the build file more, and move the ng_rollup_bundle targets into the
macro.
PR Close#33389
Removes `ngBaseDef` from the compiler and any runtime code that was still referring to it. In the cases where we'd previously generate a base def we now generate a definition for an abstract directive.
PR Close#33264
For abstract directives, i.e. directives without a selector, it may
happen that their constructor is called explicitly from a subclass,
hence its parameters are not required to be valid for Angular's DI
purposes. Prior to this commit however, having an abstract directive
with a constructor that has parameters that are not eligible for
Angular's DI would produce a compilation error.
A similar scenario may occur for `@Injectable`s, where an explicit
`use*` definition allows for the constructor to be irrelevant. For
example, the situation where `useFactory` is specified allows for the
constructor to be called explicitly with any value, so its constructor
parameters are not required to be valid. For `@Injectable`s this is
handled by generating a DI factory function that throws.
This commit implements the same solution for abstract directives, such
that a compilation error is avoided while still producing an error at
runtime if the type is instantiated implicitly by Angular's DI
mechanism.
Fixes#32981
PR Close#32987
Also removes `build:remote --spawn_strategy=remote` from .bazelrc. It seems that with Bazel 1.0.0 setting `--incompatible_list_based_execution_strategy_selection=false` no longer works around the issue with npm_package that it did when it was added. The error that was originally observed has returned after updating to Bazel 1.0.0:
```
ERROR: /home/circleci/ng/packages/angular_devkit/build_optimizer/BUILD:66:1: Assembling npm package packages/angular_devkit/build_optimizer/npm_package failed: No usable spawn strategy found for spawn with mnemonic Action. Your --spawn_strategy, --genrule_strategy or --strategy flags are probably too strict. Visit https://github.com/bazelbuild/bazel/issues/7480 for migration advice
```
This commit removes both `—incompatible_list_based_execution_strategy_selection=false` as well as `build:remote --spawn_strategy=remote` which means that Bazel will do the default behavior of picking the first available strategy from the default list, which is `remote,worker,sandboxed,local`. See https://github.com/bazelbuild/bazel/issues/7480 for more details.
PR Close#33367
This commit removes HTML elements and HTML attributes from the
completions list for external template. This is because these
completions should be handled by the native HTML extension, and not
Angular.
Once we setup TextMate grammar for inline templates, we could remove the
HTML completions completely.
PR closes https://github.com/angular/vscode-ng-language-service/issues/370
PR Close#33388
The styling algorithm requires that the `RNode` has a `className`
property in order to execute the fast-path. This changes adds the
emulation of this property.
PR Close#33392
In Angular View Engine, there are two kinds of decorator inheritance:
1) both the parent and child classes have decorators
This case is supported by InheritDefinitionFeature, which merges some fields
of the definitions (such as the inputs or queries).
2) only the parent class has a decorator
If the child class is missing a decorator, the compiler effectively behaves
as if the parent class' decorator is applied to the child class as well.
This is the "undecorated child" scenario, and this commit adds a migration
to ngcc to support this pattern in Ivy.
This migration has 2 phases. First, the NgModules of the application are
scanned for classes in 'declarations' which are missing decorators, but
whose base classes do have decorators. These classes are the undecorated
children. This scan is performed recursively, so even if a declared class
has a base class that itself inherits a decorator, this case is handled.
Next, a synthetic decorator (either @Component or @Directive) is created
on the child class. This decorator copies some critical information such
as 'selector' and 'exportAs', as well as supports any decorated fields
(@Input, etc). A flag is passed to the decorator compiler which causes a
special feature `CopyDefinitionFeature` to be included on the compiled
definition. This feature copies at runtime the remaining aspects of the
parent definition which `InheritDefinitionFeature` does not handle,
completing the "full" inheritance of the child class' decorator from its
parent class.
PR Close#33362
This commit adds CopyDefinitionFeature, which supports the case where an
entire decorator (@Component or @Directive) is inherited from parent to
child.
The existing inheritance feature, InheritDefinitionFeature, supports merging
of parent and child definitions when both were originally present. This
merges things like inputs, outputs, host bindings, etc.
CopyDefinitionFeature, on the other hand, compensates for a definition that
was missing entirely on the child class, by copying fields that aren't
ordinarily inherited (like the template function itself).
This feature is intended to only be used as part of ngcc code generation.
PR Close#33362
When upgrading an Angular application to a new version using the Angular
CLI, built-in schematics are being run to update user code from
deprecated patterns to the new way of working. For libraries that have
been built for older versions of Angular however, such schematics have
not been executed which means that deprecated code patterns may still be
present, potentially resulting in incorrect behavior.
Some of the logic of schematics has been ported over to ngcc migrations,
which are automatically run on libraries. These migrations achieve the
same goal of the regular schematics, but operating on published library
sources instead of used code.
PR Close#33362
Previously, the (currently disabled) undecorated parent migration in
ngcc would produce errors when a base class could not be determined
statically or when a class extends from a class in another package. This
is not ideal, as it would cause the library to fail compilation without
a workaround, whereas those problems are not guaranteed to cause issues.
Additionally, inheritance chains were not handled. This commit reworks
the migration to address these limitations.
PR Close#33362
In ngcc's migration system, synthetic decorators can be injected into a
compilation to ensure that certain classes are compiled with Angular
logic, where the original library code did not include the necessary
decorators. Prior to this change, synthesized decorators would have a
fake AST structure as associated node and a made-up identifier. In
theory, this may introduce issues downstream:
1) a decorator's node is used for diagnostics, so it must have position
information. Having fake AST nodes without a position is therefore a
problem. Note that this is currently not a problem in practice, as
injected synthesized decorators would not produce any diagnostics.
2) the decorator's identifier should refer to an imported symbol.
Therefore, it is required that the symbol is actually imported.
Moreover, bundle formats such as UMD and CommonJS use namespaces for
imports, so a bare `ts.Identifier` would not be suitable to use as
identifier. This was also not a problem in practice, as the identifier
is only used in the `setClassMetadata` generated code, which is omitted
for synthetically injected decorators.
To remedy these potential issues, this commit makes a decorator's
identifier optional and switches its node over from a fake AST structure
to the class' name.
PR Close#33362
A class that is provided as Angular service is required to have an
`@Injectable()` decorator so that the compiler generates its injectable
definition for the runtime. Applications are automatically migrated
using the "missing-injectable" schematic, however libraries built for
older version of Angular may not yet satisfy this requirement.
This commit ports the "missing-injectable" schematic to a migration that
is ran when ngcc is processing a library. This ensures that any service
that is provided from an NgModule or Directive/Component will have an
`@Injectable()` decorator.
PR Close#33362
ngcc has an internal cache of computed decorator information for
reflected classes, which could previously be mutated by consumers of the
reflection host. With the ability to inject synthesized decorators, such
decorators would inadvertently be added into the array of decorators
that was owned by the internal cache of the reflection host, incorrectly
resulting in synthesized decorators to be considered real decorators on
a class. This commit fixes the issue by cloning the cached array before
returning it.
PR Close#33362
This patch ensures that the `[style]` and `[class]` based bindings
are directly applied to an element's style and className attributes.
This patch optimizes the algorithm so that it...
- Doesn't construct an update an instance of `StylingMapArray` for
`[style]` and `[class]` bindings
- Doesn't apply `[style]` and `[class]` based entries using
`classList` and `style` (direct attributes are used instead)
- Doesn't split or iterate over all string-based tokens in a
string value obtained from a `[class]` binding.
This patch speeds up the following cases:
- `<div [class]>` and `<div class="..." [class]>`
- `<div [style]>` and `<div style="..." [style]>`
The overall speec increase is by over 5x.
PR Close#33336
Moves to using the absolute span of an expression AST (relative to an
entire template) rather than a relative span (relative to the start
of the expression) to find an expression AST given a position in a
template.
This is part of the changes needed to support text replacement in
templates (#33091).
PR Close#33387
The template type checking abilities of the Ivy compiler are far more
advanced than the level of template type checking that was previously
done for Angular templates. Up until now, a single compiler option
called "fullTemplateTypeCheck" was available to configure the level
of template type checking. However, now that more advanced type checking
is being done, new errors may surface that were previously not reported,
in which case it may not be feasible to fix all new errors at once.
Having only a single option to disable a large number of template type
checking capabilities does not allow for incrementally addressing newly
reported types of errors. As a solution, this commit introduces some new
compiler options to be able to enable/disable certain kinds of template
type checks on a fine-grained basis.
PR Close#33365
View Engine correctly infers the type of local refs to directives or to
<ng-template>s, just not to DOM nodes. This commit splits the
checkTypeOfReferences flag into two separate halves, allowing the compiler
to align with this behavior.
PR Close#33365
For elements that have a text attribute, it may happen that the element
is matched by a directive that consumes the attribute as an input. In
that case, the template type checker will validate the correctness of
the attribute with respect to the directive's declared type of the
input, which would typically be `boolean` for the `disabled` input.
Since empty attributes are assigned the empty string at runtime, the
template type checker would report an error for this template.
This commit introduces a strictness flag to help alleviate this
particular situation, effectively ignoring text attributes that happen
to be consumed by a directive.
PR Close#33365
During the creation of an Angular program in the compiler, a check is
done to verify whether the version of TypeScript is considered
supported, producing an error if it is not. This check was missing in
the Ivy compiler, so users may have ended up running an unsupported
TypeScript version inadvertently.
Resolves FW-1643
PR Close#33377
`LFrame` stores information specifice to the current `LView` As the code
enters and leaves `LView`s we use `enterView()` and `leaveView()`
respectively to build a a stack of `LFrame`s. This allows us to easily
restore the previous `LView` instruction state.
PR Close#33178
It is messy to keep casting `CompletionEntry.kind` from
`ng.CompletionKind` to `ts.ScriptElementKind`.
Instead, create a new type `ng.CompletionEntry` that is exactly the same
as `ts.CompletionEntry`, but with the `kind` type overridden to
`ng.CompletionKind`.
This way, we only have to cast it once, and can do so in a safe manner.
PR Close#33379
Recently it was made possible to have a directive without selector,
which are referred to as abstract directives. Such directives should not
be registered in an NgModule, but can still contain decorators for
inputs, outputs, queries, etc. The information from these decorators and
the `@Directive()` decorator itself needs to be registered with the
central `MetadataRegistry` so that other areas of the compiler can
request information about a given directive, an example of which is the
template type checker that needs to know about the inputs and outputs of
directives.
Prior to this change, however, abstract directives would only register
themselves with the `MetadataRegistry` as being an abstract directive,
without all of its other metadata like inputs and outputs. This meant
that the template type checker was unable to resolve the inputs and
outputs of these abstract directives, therefore failing to check them
correctly. The typical error would be that some property does not exist
on a DOM element, whereas said property should have been bound to the
abstract directive's input.
This commit fixes the problem by always registering the metadata of a
directive or component with the `MetadataRegistry`. Tests have been
added to ensure abstract directives are handled correctly in the
template type checker, together with tests to verify the form of
abstract directives in declaration files.
Fixes#30080
PR Close#33131
During compile-time translation inlining, the `$localize.locale`
expression will now be replaced with a string literal containing the
current locale of the translations.
PR Close#33314
In the post-$localize world the current locale value is defined by setting
`$localize.locale` which is then read at runtime by Angular in the provider
for the `LOCALE_ID` token and also passed to the ivy machinery via`setLocaleId()`.
The $localize compile-time inlining tooling can replace occurrences of
`$localize.locale` with a string literal, similar to how translations
are inlined.
// FW-1639
See https://github.com/angular/angular-cli/issues/15896
PR Close#33314
Previously, we had tested that expressions parsed in a Render3 AST
had correctly-defined absolute spans (spans relative to the entire
template, not the local expression). Sometimes we use Template ASTs
rather than Render3 ASTs, and it's desirable to test for correct
expression spans in the template parser as well.
Adding these tests resolved one bug, similar to the one fixed in
fd4fed14d8, where expressions in the value
of a template attribute were not given an absolute span corresponding to
the start of the attribute name rather than the start of the attribute
value.
The diff on this commit is large, partially because it involves some
structural changes of the template parser testing layout. In particular,
the following is done:
1. Move `createMeta*`-like functions from `template_parser_spec.ts` to
be exported from a new test utility file.
2. Create an `ExpressionSourceHumanizer`, similar to the one created in
b04488d692, to allow convenient testing
of expressions' locations.
3. Create `template_parser_absolute_span_spec.ts`, testing the spans of
expressions parsed by the template parser. This is very similar to
the `r3_ast_absolute_span_spec`.
PR Close#33253
Often the types of an `@Input`'s field don't fully reflect the types of
assignable values. This can happen when an input has a getter/setter pair
where the getter always returns a narrow type, and the setter coerces a
wider value down to the narrow type.
For example, you could imagine an input of the form:
```typescript
@Input() get value(): string {
return this._value;
}
set value(v: {toString(): string}) {
this._value = v.toString();
}
```
Here, the getter always returns a `string`, but the setter accepts any value
that can be `toString()`'d, and coerces it to a string.
Unfortunately TypeScript does not actually support this syntax, and so
Angular users are forced to type their setters as narrowly as the getters,
even though at runtime the coercion works just fine.
To support these kinds of patterns (e.g. as used by Material), this commit
adds a compiler feature called "input coercion". When a binding is made to
the 'value' input of a directive like MatInput, the compiler will look for a
static field with the name ngAcceptInputType_value. If such a field is found
the type-checking expression for the input will use the static field's type
instead of the type for the @Input field,allowing for the expression of a
type conversion between the binding expression and the value being written
to the input's field.
To solve the case above, for example, MatInput might write:
```typescript
class MatInput {
// rest of the directive...
static ngAcceptInputType_value: {toString(): string};
}
```
FW-1475 #resolve
PR Close#33243
Decrease `MIN_SAMPLE_DURATION` to make it more likely that we cane fit into single time slice.
Increase `MIN_SAMPLE_COUNT_NO_IMPROVEMENT` to make it more likely to find the best
PR Close#33341
change the existing implementation from using
```
string.split(/\s+/);
```
to a char scan which performers the same thing.
The reason why `split(/\s+/)` is slow is that:
- `/\s+/` allocates new `RegExp` every time this code executes.
- `RegExp` scans are a lot more expensive because they are more powerful.
PR Close#33326
Prior to this change, a method call of a local template variable would
incorrectly be considered a call to a method on the component class.
For example, this pattern would produce an error:
```
<ng-template let-method>{{ method(1) }}</ng-template>
```
Here, the method call should be targeting the `$implicit` variable on
the template context, not the component class. This commit corrects the
behavior by first resolving methods in the template before falling back
on the component class.
Fixes#32900
PR Close#33132
In View Engine, with fullTemplateTypeCheck mode disabled, the type of any
inferred based on the entity being referenced. This is a bug, since the
goal with fullTemplateTypeCheck: false is for Ivy and VE to be aligned in
terms of type inference.
This commit adds a 'checkTypeOfReference' flag in the TypeCheckingConfig
to control this inference, and sets it to false when fullTemplateTypeCheck
is disabled.
PR Close#33261
Libraries can expose directive/component base classes that will be
used by consumer applications. Using such a base class from another
compilation unit works fine with "ngtsc", but when using "ngc", the
compiler will thrown an error saying that the base class is not
part of a NgModule. e.g.
```
Cannot determine the module for class X in Y! Add X to the NgModule to fix it.
```
This seems to be because the logic for distinguishing directives from
abstract directives is scoped to the current compilation unit within
ngc. This causes abstract directives from other compilation units to
be considered as actual directives (causing the exception).
PR Close#33347
This should be removed before for 9.0.0 rc
BREAKING CHANGE:
@angular/bazel ng_setup_workspace() is no longer needed and has been removed.
We assume you will fetch rules_nodejs in your WORKSPACE file, and no other dependencies remain here.
Simply remove any calls to this function and the corresponding load statement.
PR Close#33330
Prior to this commit, we always invoked second i18n pass (in case whitespace removal is on, which is a default), even if a given template doesn't contain i18n information. Now we store a flag (that indicates presence of i18n information in a template) during first i18n pass and use it to check whether second pass is needed.
PR Close#33284
When computing i18n messages for templates there are two passes.
This is because messages must be computed before any whitespace
is removed. Then on a second pass, the messages must be recreated
but reusing the message ids from the first pass.
Previously ICUs were losing their legacy ids that had been computed
via the first pass. This commit fixes that by keeping track of the
message from the first pass (`previousMessage`) for ICU placeholder
nodes.
// FW-1637
PR Close#33318
Previously the parameter was `id` which is ambigous because it
could be a computed value rather than a developer specified custom
value.
PR Close#33318
This commit cleans up the I18MetaVisitor code by moving all the
state of the visitor into a `context` object that gets passed along
as the nodes are being visited. This is in keeping with how visitors
are designed but also makes it easy to remove the
[definite assignment assertions](https://mariusschulz.com/blog/strict-property-initialization-in-typescript#solution-4-definite-assignment-assertion)
from the class properties.
Also, a `I18nMessageFactory` named type is exported to make it
clearer to consumers of the `createI18nMessageFactory()` function.
PR Close#33318
This is a potential fix for https://github.com/angular/vscode-ng-language-service/issues/235
suggested by @andrius-pra in
47696136e3.
Currently, CRLF line endings are converted to LFs and this causes the
diagnostics span to be off in templates that use CRLF. The line endings
must be preserved in order to maintain correct span offset. The solution
is to add an option to the Tokenizer to indicate such preservation.
PR Close#33241
This commit adapts the private NgModule re-export system (using aliasing) to
ngcc. Not all ngcc compilations are compatible with these re-exports, as
they assume a 1:1 correspondence between .js and .d.ts files. The primary
concern here is supporting them for commonjs-only packages.
PR Close#33177
This commit refactors the aliasing system to support multiple different
AliasingHost implementations, which control specific aliasing behavior
in ngtsc (see the README.md).
A new host is introduced, the `PrivateExportAliasingHost`. This solves a
longstanding problem in ngtsc regarding support for "monorepo" style private
libraries. These are libraries which are compiled separately from the main
application, and depended upon through TypeScript path mappings. Such
libraries are frequently not in the Angular Package Format and do not have
entrypoints, but rather make use of deep import style module specifiers.
This can cause issues with ngtsc's ability to import a directive given the
module specifier of its NgModule.
For example, if the application uses a directive `Foo` from such a library
`foo`, the user might write:
```typescript
import {FooModule} from 'foo/module';
```
In this case, foo/module.d.ts is path-mapped into the program. Ordinarily
the compiler would see this as an absolute module specifier, and assume that
the `Foo` directive can be imported from the same specifier. For such non-
APF libraries, this assumption fails. Really `Foo` should be imported from
the file which declares it, but there are two problems with this:
1. The compiler would have to reverse the path mapping in order to determine
a path-mapped path to the file (maybe foo/dir.d.ts).
2. There is no guarantee that the file containing the directive is path-
mapped in the program at all.
The compiler would effectively have to "guess" 'foo/dir' as a module
specifier, which may or may not be accurate depending on how the library and
path mapping are set up.
It's strongly desirable that the compiler not break its current invariant
that the module specifier given by the user for the NgModule is always the
module specifier from which directives/pipes are imported. Thus, for any
given NgModule from a particular module specifier, it must always be
possible to import any directives/pipes from the same specifier, no matter
how it's packaged.
To make this possible, when compiling a file containing an NgModule, ngtsc
will automatically add re-exports for any directives/pipes not yet exported
by the user, with a name of the form: ɵngExportɵModuleNameɵDirectiveName
This has several effects:
1. It guarantees anyone depending on the NgModule will be able to import its
directives/pipes from the same specifier.
2. It maintains a stable name for the exported symbol that is safe to depend
on from code on NPM. Effectively, this private exported name will be a
part of the package's .d.ts API, and cannot be changed in a non-breaking
fashion.
Fixes#29361
FW-1610 #resolve
PR Close#33177
Changed `setValue` documentation for throwing an error as it contained a grammar
mistake and also may have caused ambiguity around when exactly the
method would throw.
PR Close#33126
Static methods that return a type of ModuleWithProviders currently
do not have to specify a type because the generic falls back to any.
This is problematic because the type of the actual module being
returned is not present in the type information.
Since Ivy uses d.ts files exclusively for downstream packages
(rather than metadata.json files, for example), we no longer have
the type of the actual module being created.
For this reason, a generic type should be added for
ModuleWithProviders that specifies the module type. This will be
required for all users in v10, but will only be necessary for
users of Ivy in v9.
PR Close#33217
Previously, the `FileSystem` abstraction featured a `mkdir()` method. In
`NodeJSFileSystem` (the default `FileSystem` implementation used in
actual code), the method behaved similar to Node.js' `fs.mkdirSync()`
(i.e. failing if any parent directory is missing or the directory exists
already). In contrast, `MockFileSystem` (which is the basis or mock
`FileSystem` implementations used in tests) implemented `mkdir()` as an
alias to `ensureDir()`, which behaved more like Node.js'
`fs.mkdirSync()` with the `recursive` option set to `true` (i.e.
creating any missing parent directories and succeeding if the directory
exists already).
This commit fixes this inconsistency by removing the `mkdir()` method,
which was not used anyway and only keeping `ensureDir()` (which is
consistent across our different `FileSystem` implementations).
PR Close#33237
When `ngcc` is running in parallel mode (usually when run from the
command line) and the `createNewEntryPointFormats` option is set to true
(e.g. via the `--create-ivy-entry-points` command line option), it can
happen that two workers end up trying to create the same directory at
the same time. This can lead to a race condition, where both check for
the directory existence, see that the directory does not exist and both
try to create it, with the second failing due the directory's having
already been created by the first one. Note that this only affects
directories and not files, because `ngcc` tasks operate on different
sets of files.
This commit avoids this race condition by allowing `FileSystem`'s
`ensureDir()` method to not fail if one of the directories it is trying
to create already exists (and is indeed a directory). This is fine for
the `ensureDir()` method, since it's purpose is to ensure that the
specified directory exists. So, even if the `mkdir()` call failed
(because the directory exists), `ensureDir()` has still completed its
mission.
Related discussion: https://github.com/angular/angular/pull/33049#issuecomment-540485703
FW-1635 #resolve
PR Close#33237
Often the types of an `@Input`'s field don't fully reflect the types of
assignable values. This can happen when an input has a getter/setter pair
where the getter always returns a narrow type, and the setter coerces a
wider value down to the narrow type.
For example, you could imagine an input of the form:
```typescript
@Input() get value(): string {
return this._value;
}
set value(v: {toString(): string}) {
this._value = v.toString();
}
```
Here, the getter always returns a `string`, but the setter accepts any value
that can be `toString()`'d, and coerces it to a string.
Unfortunately TypeScript does not actually support this syntax, and so
Angular users are forced to type their setters as narrowly as the getters,
even though at runtime the coercion works just fine.
To support these kinds of patterns (e.g. as used by Material), this commit
adds a compiler feature called "input coercion". When a binding is made to
the 'value' input of a directive like MatInput, the compiler will look for a
static function with the name ngCoerceInput_value. If such a function is
found, the type-checking expression for the input will be wrapped in a call
to the function, allowing for the expression of a type conversion between
the binding expression and the value being written to the input's field.
To solve the case above, for example, MatInput might write:
```typescript
class MatInput {
// rest of the directive...
static ngCoerceInput_value(value: {toString(): string}): string {
return null!;
}
}
```
FW-1475 #resolve
PR Close#33243
As a hack to get the Ivy compiler ngtsc off the ground, the existing
'allowEmptyCodegenFiles' option was used to control generation of ngfactory
and ngsummary shims during compilation. This option was selected since it's
enabled in google3 but never enabled in external projects.
As ngtsc is now mature and the role shims play in compilation is now better
understood across the ecosystem, this commit introduces two new compiler
options to control shim generation:
* generateNgFactoryShims controls the generation of .ngfactory shims.
* generateNgSummaryShims controls the generation of .ngsummary shims.
The 'allowEmptyCodegenFiles' option is still honored if either of the above
flags are not set explicitly.
PR Close#33256
Angular v9 schematics should print out a link to the migration
guide associated with each schematic. This way, users have an
easy way to find more information about the automatic code
transformations they will see with `ng update`.
PR Close#33258
With Ivy the `entryComponents` array isn't necessary anymore. These changes mark it as deprecated so that it can be removed in a future version.
PR Close#33205
Currently if a `ModuleWithProviders` is missng its generic type, we throw a cryptic error like:
```
error TS-991010: Value at position 3 in the NgModule.imports of TodosModule is not a reference: [object Object]
```
These changes add a better error to make it easier to debug.
PR Close#33187
Resubmit #31168 now that google3 tests can pass. This requires http://cl/272696717 to be patched.
Original description from jasonaden:
Without this change when using UrlTree redirects in urlUpdateStrategy="eager", the URL would get
updated to the target location, then redirected. This resulted in having an additional entry in the
history and thus the back button would be broken (going back would land on the URL causing a new
redirect).
Additionally, there was a bug where the redirect, even without urlUpdateStrategy="eager", could
create a history with too many entries. This was due to kicking off a new navigation within the
navigation cancelling logic. With this PR the new navigation is pushed to the next tick with a
setTimeout, allowing the page being redirected from to be cancelled before starting a new
navigation.
Related to #27148
fix(router): adjust UrlTree redirect to replace URL if in eager update
Fix lint errors
PR Close#32988
Until now, the template type checker has not checked any of the event
bindings that could be present on an element, for example
```
<my-cmp
(changed)="handleChange($event)"
(click)="handleClick($event)"></my-cmp>
```
has two event bindings: the `change` event corresponding with an
`@Output()` on the `my-cmp` component and the `click` DOM event.
This commit adds functionality to the template type checker in order to
type check both kind of event bindings. This means that the correctness
of the bindings expressions, as well as the type of the `$event`
variable will now be taken into account during template type checking.
Resolves FW-1598
PR Close#33125
In ES5 modules, the class declarations consist of an IIFE with inner
and outer declarations that represent the class. The `EsmReflectionHost`
has logic to ensure that `getDeclarationOfIdentifier()` always returns the
outer declaration.
Before this commit, if an identifier referred to an alias of the inner
declaration, then `getDeclarationOfIdentifier()` was failing to find
the outer declaration - instead returning the inner declaration.
Now the identifier is correctly resolved up to the outer declaration
as expected.
This should fix some of the failing 3rd party packages discussed in
https://github.com/angular/ngcc-validation/issues/57.
PR Close#33252
This commit removes `@angular-devkit/build-angular` from package.json
for a project that opts into Bazel. This is because the package adds a
dependency on node-sass, which is rejected by Bazel due to its absense.
This commit also appends to `scripts.postinstall` if it already exists.
This is needed because `ng new` in CLI v9 now automatically adds a
postinstall step for `ngcc`.
PR Close#32946
BREAKING CHANGE:
In v5, we deprecated support for the intl API in order to improve the browser support. We are now removing these deprecated APIs for v9. See the original change here for more info on why: #18284.
PR Close#29250
This commit fixes ngtsc's import generator to use the ReflectionHost when
looking through the exports of an ES module to find the export of a
particular declaration that's being imported. This is necessary because
some module formats like CommonJS have unusual export mechanics, and the
normal TypeScript ts.TypeChecker does not understand them.
This fixes an issue with ngcc + CommonJS where exports were not being
enumerated correctly.
FW-1630 #resolve
PR Close#33192
Normally, when ngcc encounters a package with missing dependencies while
attempting to determine a compilation ordering, it will ignore that package.
This commit adds a configuration for a flag to tell ngcc to compile the
package anyway, regardless of any missing dependencies.
FW-1931 #resolve
PR Close#33192
In the ReflectionHost API, a 'viaModule' indicates that a particular value
originated in another absolute module. It should always be 'null' for values
originating in relatively-imported modules.
This commit fixes a bug in the CommonJsReflectionHost where viaModule would
be reported even for relatively-imported values, which causes invalid import
statements to be generated during compilation.
A test is added to verify the correct behavior.
FW-1628 #resolve
PR Close#33192
This allows disabling parallelism in ngcc if desired, which is mainly useful
for debugging. The implementation creates the flag and passes its value to
mainNgcc.
No tests are added since the feature mainly exists already - ngcc supports
both parallel and serial execution. This commit only allows switching the
flag via the commandline.
PR Close#33192
Prior to this commit, the absolute spans (relative to template source
file rather than the start of an expression) of expressions in a
template attribute like `*ngIf` were generated incorrectly, equating to
the relative spans.
This fixes the bug by passing an `absoluteOffset` parameter when parsing
template bindings.
Through some levels of indirection, this is required for the Language
Service to support text replacement in
https://github.com/angular/angular/pull/33091.
PR Close#33189
These were getting included in the @angular/localize package.
Instead, patch the upstream files to work with TS typeRoots option
See bazelbuild/rules_nodejs#1033
PR Close#33226
Prior to this fix if a map-based class or style binding wrote
its values onto an elemenent, the internal styling context would
not register the binding if the initial value as a `NO_CHANGE`
value. This situation occurs if a directive takes control of the
`class` or `style` input values and then returns a `NO_CHANGE` value
if the initial value is empty.
This patch ensures that all bindings are always registered with the
`TStylingContext` data-structure even if their initial value is
an instance of `NO_CHANGE`.
PR Close#33236
Prior to this fix, all style/class bindings (e.g. `[style]` and
`[class.foo]`) would quietly update a binding value if and when the
current binding value changes during checkNoChanges.
With this patch, all styling instructions will properly check to see
if the value has changed during the second pass of detectChanges()
if checkNoChanges is active.
PR Close#33103
Prior to this commit, metadata defined on ICU container element was not inherited by the ICU if the whole message is a single ICU (for example: `<ng-container i18n="meaning|description@@id">{count, select, ...}</ng-container>). This commit updates the logic to use parent container i18n meta information for the cases when a message consists of a single ICU.
Fixes#33171
PR Close#33191
LocaleID defs are not considered public API, so the property
that contains them should be prefixed with Angular's marker
for "private" ('ɵ') to discourage apps from relying on def
APIs directly.
This commit adds the prefix and shortens the name from
ngLocaleIdDef to loc. This is because property names
cannot be minified by Uglify without turning on property
mangling (which most apps have turned off) and are thus
size-sensitive.
PR Close#33212
Previously, when `ngcc` was reflecting on class members it did not
account for the fact that a member could be of the kind
`IndexSignature`. This can happen, for example, on abstract classes (as
is the case for [JsonCallbackContext][1]).
Trying to reflect on such members (and failing to recognize their kind),
resulted in warnings, such as:
```
Warning: Unknown member type: "[key: string]: (data: any) => void;
```
While these warnings are harmless, they can be confusing and worrisome
for users.
This commit avoids such warnings by detecting class members of the
`IndexSignature` kind and ignoring them.
[1]: https://github.com/angular/angular/blob/4659cc26e/packages/common/http/src/jsonp.ts#L39
PR Close#33198
Turns out that writing to global state is more expensive than writing to
a property on an object.
Slower:
````
let count = 0;
function increment() {
count++;
}
```
Faster:
````
const state = {
count: 0
};
function increment() {
state.count++;
}
```
This change moves all of the instruction state into a single state object.
`noop_change_detection` benchmark
Pre refactoring: 16.7 us
Post refactoring: 14.523 us (-13.3%)
PR Close#33093
Prior to this commit, all `className` inputs were not set because the runtime code assumed that the `classMap` instruction is only generated for `[class]` bindings. However the `[className]` binding also produces the same `classMap`, thus the code needs to distinguish between `class` and `className`. This commit adds extra logic to select the right input name and also throws an error in case `[class]` and `[className]` bindings are used on the same element simultaneously.
PR Close#33188
Prior to this change, the template type checker would incorrectly bind
non-property bindings such as `[class.strong]`, `[style.color]` and
`[attr.enabled]` to directive inputs of the same name. This is
undesirable, as those bindings are never actually bound to the inputs at
runtime.
Fixes#32099Fixes#32496
Resolves FW-1596
PR Close#33130
This patch introduces the `printTable()` and `printSources()`
methods to `DebugStylingContext` which can be used via the
`window.ng.getDebugNode` helpers when debugging an application.
PR Close#33179
This commit speeds up the tests by calling `MockHost.reset()` in
`beforeEach()` instead of destroying the entire language service and
creating a new one. The creation of a new language service instance is
expensive due to the need to initialize many core Symbols when creating
a new program.
This speeds ups the test (on my local machine) from 35 secs to 15 secs.
PR Close#33200
Injectable defs are not considered public API, so the property
that contains them should be prefixed with Angular's marker
for "private" ('ɵ') to discourage apps from relying on def
APIs directly.
This commit adds the prefix and shortens the name from
ngInjectableDef to "prov" (for "provider", since injector defs
are known as "inj"). This is because property names cannot
be minified by Uglify without turning on property mangling
(which most apps have turned off) and are thus size-sensitive.
PR Close#33151
Injector defs are not considered public API, so the property
that contains them should be prefixed with Angular's marker
for "private" ('ɵ') to discourage apps from relying on def
APIs directly.
This commit adds the prefix and shortens the name from
ngInjectorDef to inj. This is because property names
cannot be minified by Uglify without turning on property
mangling (which most apps have turned off) and are thus
size-sensitive.
PR Close#33151
This change assures that data structures related to initial inputs
(ones set from static attributes) are created only once (during the
first template pass) and no additional runtime checks are done for
subsequent passes.
Additionally this commit changes the data structure used by initial inputs
on TNode - previously initial inputs for a directive were stored at the
directive index in LView. This meant that an array holding initial inputs
was relativelly big and had many null elements (as placeholders for elements,
directives, injector etc.). After the change we only create an array of a size
equal to a number of directives matched on a given TNode.
For the `directive_instantiate` benchmark it boils to allocating a 1-element
array vs. 100-element array previously.
PR Close#33195
These were getting included in the @angular/localize package.
Instead, patch the upstream files to work with TS typeRoots option
See bazelbuild/rules_nodejs#1033
PR Close#33176
There are many specs in `ts_plugin_spec.ts` that exercise the behavior
of completions. These specs should belong in `completions_spec` instead.
In addition,
1. Tests for `getExternalFiles()` added in `ts_plugin_spec.ts`
2. Fixed bug in MockHost.reset() to remove overriden script names
3. Add test for TS diagnostics when `angularOnly = true` is not set
PR Close#33159
The `legacyMessageIdFormat` is taken from the `i18nInFormat` property but we were only considering
`xmb`, `xlf` and `xlf2` values.
The CLI also supports `xliff` and `xliff2` values for the
`i18nInFormat`.
This commit adds support for those aliases.
PR Close#33160
Prior to this commit, Ivy runtime asserted that a given element is an instance of a DOM node. These asserts may not be correct in case custom renderer is used, which operates objects with a shape different than DOM nodes. This commit updates the code to avoid the mentioned checks in case procedural renderer is used.
PR Close#33156
Prior to this patch, if a map-class binding is applied directly then
that value will be incorrectly provided a sanitizer even if there is no
sanitization present for an element.
PR Close#33154
Now, hovering over an attribute on an element will provide information
about the directive that attribute matches in the element, if any.
(More generally, we return information about directive symbols
matched on an element attribute.)
I believe this is similar to how the indexer provides this kind of
information, though more precise in the sense that this commit provides
directive information only if the directive selector exactly matches the
attribute selector. In another sense, this is a limitation.
In fact, there are the limitations of:
- Directives matched on the element, but with a selector of anything
more than the attribute (e.g. `div[string-model]` or
`[string-model][other-attr]`) will not be returned as symbols matching
on the attribute.
- Only one symbol can be returned currently. If the attribute matches
multiple directives, only one directive symbol will be returned.
Furthermore, we cannot say that the directive symbol returned is
determinstic.
Resolution of these limitations can be discussed in the future. At least
the second limitation should be very easy to fixup in a future commit.
This relies solely on the template compiler and is agnostic to any Ivy
changes, so this is strictly a feature enhancement that will not have to
be refactored when we migrate the language service to Ivy.
PR Close#33127
This PR adds es2015 lib to the `tsconfig.json` of the test project so
that `Promise` could be used. Note this only affects diagnostics in the
IDE. The tsconfig in Language Service Mock Host is the actual config
values used, and it already has es2015 lib.
- Other minor cleanup: Rename imports in `main.ts`.
- Add more cases to `parsing-cases.ts`, which are tested in later PRs
PR Close#33157
Module defs are not considered public API, so the property
that contains them should be prefixed with Angular's marker
for "private" ('ɵ') to discourage apps from relying on def
APIs directly.
This commit adds the prefix and shortens the name from
ngModuleDef to mod. This is because property names
cannot be minified by Uglify without turning on property
mangling (which most apps have turned off) and are thus
size-sensitive.
PR Close#33142
Pipe defs are not considered public API, so the property
that contains them should be prefixed with Angular's marker
for "private" ('ɵ') to discourage apps from relying on def
APIs directly.
This commit adds the prefix and shortens the name from
ngPipeDef to pipe. This is because property names
cannot be minified by Uglify without turning on property
mangling (which most apps have turned off) and are thus
size-sensitive.
PR Close#33142
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
Enables providing information about the NgModule a component is in when
its selector is hovered on in a template. Also enables differentiation
of a component and a directive when a directive class name is hovered
over in a TypeScript file.
Next step is to enable hover information for directives.
Part of #32565.
PR Close#33118
Factory defs are not considered public API, so the property
that contains them should be prefixed with Angular's marker
for "private" ('ɵ') to discourage apps from relying on def
APIs directly.
This commit adds the prefix and shortens the name from
ngFactoryDef to fac. This is because property names
cannot be minified by Uglify without turning on property
mangling (which most apps have turned off) and are thus
size-sensitive.
Note that the other "defs" (ngPipeDef, etc) will be
prefixed and shortened in follow-up PRs, in an attempt to
limit how large and conflict-y this change is.
PR Close#33116
Some changes in rules_nodejs providers folded into @angular/bazel package:
* `NodeModuleSources` renamed to `NpmPackageInfo` and now loaded from `//internal/common:npm_package_info.bzl`
* `collect_node_modules_aspect` renamed to `node_modules_aspect`
* new JS provider `JSNamedModuleInfo` now available and ng_module provides it using the `js_named_module_info` factory function
* sources_aspect has also been removed so the use of the `node_sources` legacy provider has been replaced with `JSNamedModuleInfo`.
PR Close#33073
Prior to this change, a static attribute that corresponds with a
directive's input would not be type-checked against the type of the
input. This is unfortunate, as a static value always has type `string`,
whereas the directive's input type might be something different. This
typically occurs when a developer forgets to enclose the attribute name
in brackets to make it a property binding.
This commit lets static attributes be considered as bindings with string
values, so that they will be properly type-checked.
PR Close#33066
This commit introduces an internal config option of the template type
checker that allows to disable strict null checks of input bindings to
directives. This may be particularly useful when a directive is from a
library that is not compiled with `strictNullChecks` enabled.
Right now, strict null checks are enabled when `fullTemplateTypeCheck`
is turned on, and disabled when it's off. In the near future, several of
the internal configuration options will be added as public Angular
compiler options so that users can have fine-grained control over which
areas of the template type checker to enable, allowing for a more
incremental migration strategy.
PR Close#33066
Prior to this change, the template type checker would always allow a
value of type `undefined` to be passed into a directive's inputs, even
if the input's type did not allow for it. This was due to how the type
constructor for a directive was generated, where a `Partial` mapped
type was used to allow for inputs to be unset. This essentially
introduces the `undefined` type as acceptable type for all inputs.
This commit removes the `Partial` type from the type constructor, which
means that we can no longer omit any properties that were unset.
Instead, any properties that are not set will still be included in the
type constructor call, having their value assigned to `any`.
Before:
```typescript
class NgForOf<T> {
static ngTypeCtor<T>(init: Partial<Pick<NgForOf<T>,
'ngForOf'|'ngForTrackBy'|'ngForTemplate'>>): NgForOf<T>;
}
NgForOf.ngTypeCtor(init: {ngForOf: ['foo', 'bar']});
```
After:
```typescript
class NgForOf<T> {
static ngTypeCtor<T>(init: Pick<NgForOf<T>,
'ngForOf'|'ngForTrackBy'|'ngForTemplate'>): NgForOf<T>;
}
NgForOf.ngTypeCtor(init: {
ngForOf: ['foo', 'bar'],
ngForTrackBy: null as any,
ngForTemplate: null as any,
});
```
This change only affects generated type check code, the generated
runtime code is not affected.
Fixes#32690
Resolves FW-1606
PR Close#33066
Currently, method `getVarDeclarations()` does not try to resolve the type of
exported variable from *ngIf directive. It always returns `any` type.
By resolving the real type of exported variable, it is now possible to use this
type information in language service and provide completions, go to definition
and quick info functionality in expressions that use exported variable.
Also language service will provide more accurate diagnostic errors during
development.
PR Close#33016
Currenly the `missing-injectable` migration only migrates providers referenced from
`@NgModule` definitions. The schematic currently does not cover the migration for
providers referenced in `@Directive` or `@Component` definitions.
We need to handle the following keys for directives/components:
- `@Directive` -> `providers`
- `@Component` -> `providers` and `viewProviders`.
This commit ensures that the migration handles providers for these
definitions.
PR Close#33011
When responses are cached ok during sw initialization,
but caching throws an error when handling api response,
this response never gets to client. Fix response
delivery by catching errors, add logging and 2 test cases.
Fixes#21412
PR Close#32996
Make safe caching and unsafe caching methods compatible so they can be
swapped. Gives more flexibility when writing http response processing
code.
PR Close#32996
Currently, the spans of expressions are recorded only relative to the
template node that they reside in, not their source file.
Introduce a `sourceSpan` property on expression ASTs that records the
location of an expression relative to the entire source code file that
it is in. This may allow for reducing duplication of effort in
ngtsc/typecheck/src/diagnostics later on as well.
Child of #31898
PR Close#31897
BREAKING CHANGE:
We no longer directly have a direct depedency on `tslib`. Instead it is now listed a `peerDependency`.
Users not using the CLI will need to manually install `tslib` via;
```
yarn add tslib
```
or
```
npm install tslib --save
```
PR Close#32167
There are numerous approaches to downlevelling backticked
template strings to ES5.
This commit handles yet another one that Babel applies.
PR Close#33097
In Babel `NodePath` objects have more useful information available than
simple AST nodes. But they are more difficult to create, especially for testing.
This commit prepares the way for parsing more complex code downlevelling
scenarios.
PR Close#33097
Previously, the list of missing dependencies was not explicitly joined,
which resulted in the default `,` joiner being used during
stringification.
This commit explicitly joins the missing dependency lines to avoid
unnecessary commas.
Before:
```
The target entry-point "some-entry-point" has missing dependencies:
- dependency 1
, - dependency 2
, - dependency 3
```
After:
```
The target entry-point "some-entry-point" has missing dependencies:
- dependency 1
- dependency 2
- dependency 3
```
PR Close#33139
Previously, the executable for the Angular Compatibility Compiler
(`ngcc`) was called `ivy-ngcc`. This would be confusing for users not
familiar with our internal terminology, especially given that we call it
`ngcc` in all our docs and presentations.
This commit renames the executable to `ngcc` and replaces `ivy-ngcc`
with a script that errors with an informative message (prompting the
user to use `ngcc` instead).
Jira issue: [FW-1624](https://angular-team.atlassian.net/browse/FW-1624)
PR Close#33140
A few specs in `completions_spec.ts` are non-deterministic and do not provide much value to test a specific behavior of language service.
Besides that, they are also slow to run.
PR Close#33120
Remove the following methods from MockHost:
1. `getMarkerLocations`: Replaced with `getLocationMarkerFor()`
2. `getReferenceMarkers`: Replaced with `getReferenceMarkerFor()`
PR Close#33115
Directive defs are not considered public API, so the property
that contains them should be prefixed with Angular's marker
for "private" ('ɵ') to discourage apps from relying on def
APIs directly.
This commit adds the prefix and shortens the name from
ngDirectiveDef to dir. This is because property names
cannot be minified by Uglify without turning on property
mangling (which most apps have turned off) and are thus
size-sensitive.
Note that the other "defs" (ngFactoryDef, etc) will be
prefixed and shortened in follow-up PRs, in an attempt to
limit how large and conflict-y this change is.
PR Close#33110
For elements in a template that look like custom elements, i.e.
containing a dash in their name, the template type checker will now
issue an error with instructions on how the resolve the issue.
Additionally, a property binding to a non-existent property will also
produce a more descriptive error message.
Resolves FW-1597
PR Close#33064
Component defs are not considered public API, so the property
that contains them should be prefixed with Angular's marker
for "private" ('ɵ') to discourage apps from relying on def
APIs directly.
This commit adds the prefix and shortens the name from
`ngComponentDef` to `cmp`. This is because property names
cannot be minified by Uglify without turning on property
mangling (which most apps have turned off) and are thus
size-sensitive.
Note that the other "defs" (ngDirectiveDef, etc) will be
prefixed and shortened in follow-up PRs, in an attempt to
limit how large and conflict-y this change is.
PR Close#33088
Based on the results of the `directive_instantiate` executing host
bindings logic (in creation mode) account for ~23% of time spent in
the directive instantiation, even if a directive doesn't have host
bindings! This is clearly wastful hence a new flag.
PR Close#33102
Removes the deprecated `ngForm` element selector and all of the code related to it.
BREAKING CHANGES:
* `<ngForm></ngForm>` can no longer be used as a selector. Use `<ng-form></ng-form>` instead.
* The `NgFromSelectorWarning` directive has been removed.
* `FormsModule.withConfig` has been removed. Use the `FormsModule` directly.
PR Close#33058
There is some confusion around which `NavigationExtras` values are used
by createUrlTree. This specifies that only values that change the URL
are used. This came up during the discussion in #27148.
PR Close#33029
It is now possible to include a set of default ngcc configurations
that ship with ngcc out of the box. This allows ngcc to handle a
set of common packages, which are unlikely to be fixed, without
requiring the application developer to write their own configuration
for them.
Any packages that are configured at the package or project level
will override these default configurations. This allows a reasonable
level of control at the package and user level.
PR Close#33008
This patch enables a styling debug instance (which is apart of the
`debugNode.styles` or `debugNode.classes` data structures) to expose
its context value so that it can be easily debugged.
PR Close#32856
The current `typings` value in `package.json` causes the import of
`@angular/language-service` in TypeScript to be generated as
```
const language_service_1 = require("@angular/language-service/language-service");
```
in CJS output.
This breaks the import shim that overwrites the behavior of `require` at
runtime. Changing the typings to `index.d.ts` fixes the issue.
PR Close#33043
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
Prior to this fix, whenever a style or class binding is present, the
binding application process would require an instance of `TStylingContext`
to be built regardless of whether or not any binding resolution is needed
(just so that it knows whether or not there are any collisions).
This check is, however, unnecessary because if (and only if) there
are directives present on the element then are collisions possible.
This patch removes the need for style/class bindings to register
themselves on to a `TStylingContext` if there are no directives and
present on an element. This means that all map and prop-based
style/class bindings are applied as soon as bindings are updated on
an element.
PR Close#32919
We used to have a custom version of the NodeInjectorFactory check that was
supposed to be faster to the direct usage of the `instanceof` operator. This
might have been the case in the past but the recent benchmark shows that using
`instanceof` speeds up the `directive_instantiate` by ~10%
(from time getting from ~340ms down to ~305ms).
PR Close#33082
A PR that updates one of the benchmarks and another one that changes the signature for `elementStart` got in around the same time which is causing a compilation error. These changes fix the error.
PR Close#33067
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
Currently Ivy stores the element attributes into an array above the component def and passes it into the relevant instructions, however the problem is that upon minification the array will get a unique name which won't compress very well. These changes move the attributes array into the component def and pass in the index into the instructions instead.
Before:
```
const _c0 = ['foo', 'bar'];
SomeComp.ngComponentDef = defineComponent({
template: function() {
element(0, 'div', _c0);
}
});
```
After:
```
SomeComp.ngComponentDef = defineComponent({
consts: [['foo', 'bar']],
template: function() {
element(0, 'div', 0);
}
});
```
A couple of cases that this PR doesn't handle:
* Template references are still in a separate array.
* i18n attributes are still in a separate array.
PR Close#32798
Accessing a string's character at index allocates a new, single character string.
A better (faster) check is to use `charCodeAt` that doesn't trigger allocation.
This simple change speeds up the element_text_create benchmark by ~7%.
PR Close#32997
The history_server rule is not longer shipped with rules_nodejs as it has been replaced by auto-generated rule `load("@npm//history-server:index.bzl", "history_server")` which requires the user to add history-server to their package.json.
PR Close#32889
Removes the `Renderer` and related symbols which have been deprecated since version 4.
BREAKING CHANGES:
* `Renderer` has been removed. Use `Renderer2` instead.
* `RenderComponentType` has been removed. Use `RendererType2` instead.
* `RootRenderer` has been removed. Use `RendererFactory2` instead.
PR Close#33019
Currently the `ngForOf` input accepts `null` or `undefined` as valid
values. Although when using strict template input type checking
(which will be supported by `ngtsc`), passing `null` or `undefined`
with strict null checks enabled causes a type check failure because
the type for the `ngForOf` input becomes too strict if strict null checks
are enabled. The type of the input needs to be expanded to also accept
`null` or `undefined` to behave consistently regardless of the
`strictNullChecks` flag.
This is necessary because whenever strict input type checking is enabled
by default, most of the Angular projects that use `*ngFor` with the async pipe
will either need to disable template type checking or strict null checks
because the `async` pipe returns `null` if the observable hasn't been
emitted yet.
See for example how this affects the `angular/components` repository and
how much bloat the workaround involves: https://github.com/angular/components/pull/16373/files#r296942696.
PR Close#31371
In View Engine, animation metadata could occur in nested arrays which
would be flattened in the compiler. When compiling a component for Ivy
however, the compiler no longer statically evaluates a component's
animation metadata and is therefore unable to flatten it statically.
This resulted in an issue to find animations at runtime, as the metadata
was incorrectly registered with the animation engine.
Although it would be possible to statically evaluate the animation
metadata in ngtsc, doing so would prevent reusable animations exported
from libraries from being usable as ngtsc's partial evaluator is unable
to read values inside libraries. This is unlike ngc's usage of static
symbols represented in a library's `.metadata.json`, which explains how
the View Engine compiler is able to flatten the animation metadata
statically.
As an alternative solution, the metadata flattening is now done in the
runtime during the registration of the animation metadata with the
animation engine.
Fixes#32794
PR Close#32818
As mentioned in the previous commit, the regexp used by
`Validators.email()` is a slightly enhanced version of the
[WHATWG one](https://html.spec.whatwg.org/multipage/input.html#valid-e-mail-address).
This commit refactors the regexp (without changing its behavior) to make
it more closely match the format of WHATWG version, so that it is easier
for people to compare it against the WHATWG one and understand the
differences.
The main changes were:
- Changing the order of characters/character classes inside `[...]`;
e.g. `[A-Za-z]` --> `[a-zA-Z]`
- Mark all groups as non-capturing (since we do not use the captured
values); e.g. `(foo)` --> `(?:foo)`
(This could theoretically also have a positive performance impact, but
I suspect JavaScript engines are already optimizing away capturing
groups when they are not used.)
PR Close#32961
Previously, there was no documentation of what `Validators.email()`
expects as a valid e-mail address, making it difficult for people to
determine whether it covers their requirements or not. Even more so that
the used pattern slightly deviates from the
[WHATWG version](https://html.spec.whatwg.org/multipage/input.html#valid-e-mail-address).
One's only option was to look at the source code and try to decipher the
regexp pattern.
This commit adds a high-level description of the validator and mentions
its similarity to and differences from the WHATWG version. It also adds
a brief explanation of the regexp's behavior and references for more
information in the source code to provide more context to
maintainers/users trying to understand the implementation in the future.
Fixes#18985Fixes#25186Closes#32747
PR Close#32961
Prior to this change, ng-reflect properties were not created in case an attribute was marked as translatable (for ex. `i18n-title`). This commit adds the logic to generate ng-reflect for such cases.
PR Close#32989
The schematics added in #32791 is currently failing as the package.json does not reference it.
```
> ng add @angular/localize@9.0.0-next.9
+ @angular/localize@9.0.0-next.9
added 1 package from 1 contributor in 6.745s
Installed packages for tooling via npm.
The package that you are trying to add does not support schematics. You can try using a different version of the package or contact the package author to add ng-add support.
```
PR Close#33025
Prior to this commit, the `ng` was exposed in global namespace, which turned out to be problematic when minifying code with Closure, since it sometimes clobber our `ng` global. This commit aligns Ivy debugging tools behavior with existing logic in "platform-browser" package (packages/platform-browser/src/dom/util.ts#L31) by avoiding `ng` in global namespace when Closure Compiler is used.
PR Close#33010
Re-enables the dynamic queries migration, now that we have all of the necessary framework changes in place.
Also moves the logic that identifies static queries out of the compiler and into the static queries migration, because that's the only place left that's using it.
PR Close#32992
Followup to #32720 that removed the logic that statically determines whether a query is dynamic.
This updates the docs to reflect that, and mentions that the flag now defaults to false.
PR Close#32993
Current we need to create and override certain compiler host methods in every schematic because schematics use a virtual fs. We this change we extract this logic to a common util.
PR Close#32827
Not sure why it works on other people's environments, but after
217db9b21 I started getting the following error when running
`scripts/build-packages-dist.sh` (on Windows):
```
ERROR: C:/.../angular/packages/bazel/docs/BUILD.bazel:3:1: Generating Skylark documentation dir for docs (3 files) failed (Exit 1)
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "c:\...\temp\Bazel.runfiles_u_l5te\runfiles\io_bazel_skydoc\skydoc\main.py", line 335, in <module>
main(sys.argv)
File "c:\...\temp\Bazel.runfiles_u_l5te\runfiles\io_bazel_skydoc\skydoc\main.py", line 303, in main
load_symbols = load_sym_extractor.extract(bzl_file)
File "c:\...\temp\Bazel.runfiles_u_l5te\runfiles\io_bazel_skydoc\skydoc\load_extractor.py", line 110, in extract
load_symbols = self._extract_loads(bzl_file)
File "c:\...\temp\Bazel.runfiles_u_l5te\runfiles\io_bazel_skydoc\skydoc\load_extractor.py", line 38, in _extract_loads
tree = ast.parse(f.read(), bzl_file)
File "C:\...\.windows-build-tools\python27\lib\ast.py", line 37, in parse
return compile(source, filename, mode, PyCF_ONLY_AST)
File "packages/bazel/src/ng_package/ng_package.bzl", line 39
print("[ng_package.bzl]", *args)
^
SyntaxError: invalid syntax
```
It seems expected, because `print` is not a function, so
`print(foo, *args)` is interpreted as printing a tuple (where `*args` is
invalid syntax). Not sure why it doesn't break on other people's
machines :/
This change makes the verbose logs a little less pretty, but that
shouldn't be a big issue (given that it is an opt-in feature and it can
always be overwritten locally, if necessary).
PR Close#32923
The creation of StaticReflector in createMetadataResolver() is a very expensive operation because it involves numerous module resolutions.
To make matter worse, since the API of the Reflector does not provide the ability to invalidate its internal caches, it has to be destroyed and recreated on *every* program change.
This has a HUGE impact on performance.
This PR fixes this problem by carefully invalidating all StaticSymbols in a file that has changed, thereby reducing the overhead of recomputation on program change.
PR Close#32543
This is a re-submit of #32686.
Switches back to having the static flag be optional on ViewChild and ContentChild queries, in preparation for changing its default value.
PR Close#32986
These changes switch to defaulting the `static` flag on `ViewChild` and `ContentChild` queries to `false`, in addition to removing the logic that statically determines whether a query is dynamic.
PR Close#32720
The `$localize` library uses a new message digest function for
computing message ids. This means that translations in legacy
translation files will no longer match the message ids in the code
and so will not be translated.
This commit adds the ability to specify the format of your legacy
translation files, so that the appropriate message id can be rendered
in the `$localize` tagged strings. This results in larger code size
and requires that all translations are in the legacy format.
Going forward the developer should migrate their translation files
to use the new message id format.
PR Close#32937
Add unit test coverage for new logic added in #32874 and for existing
logic that was untested.
test(upgrade): add unit tests for AngularJSUrlCodec's parse method
Add additional coverage and fix spacing
test(upgrade): add unit tests for AngularJSUrlCodec's parse method
Add unit test coverage for new logic added in #32874 and for existing
logic that was untested.
test(upgrade): add unit tests for AngularJSUrlCodec's parse method
Add additional coverage and fix spacing
test(upgrade): add unit tests for AngularJSUrlCodec's parse method
Add unit test coverage for new logic added in #32874 and for existing
logic that was untested.
test(upgrade): add unit tests for AngularJSUrlCodec's parse method
Add unit test coverage for new logic added in #32874 and for existing
logic that was untested.
test(upgrade): add unit tests for AngularJSUrlCodec's parse method
Add additional coverage and fix spacing
test(upgrade): add unit tests for AngularJSUrlCodec's parse method
Add unit test coverage for new logic added in #32874 and for existing
logic that was untested.
PR Close#32976
This PR updates Angular to compile with TypeScript 3.6 while retaining
compatibility with TS3.5. We achieve this by inserting several `as any`
casts for compatiblity around `ts.CompilerHost` APIs.
PR Close#32908
Currently the undecorated-classes-with-di migration leverages NGC in order
to work with metadata resolution. Since NGC by default tries to resolve referenced
resources on initialization of the underlying TS program, it can result in unexpected
migration failures due to missing resource files.
This is especially an issue since the CLI wraps the `AngularCompilerProgram` with
special logic (i.e. to support SCSS preprocessing etc.). We don't have all of this since
we instantiate a vanilla NGC program.
The solution to the problem is to simply treat resource requests as valid, and returning
a fake content. The migration is not dependent on templates or stylesheets.. so it's the
simplest and most robust solution.
Fixes#32826
PR Close#32953
ec4381d explicitly set `enableIvy: false` for all migrations inside
the core package. This actually hides migration issues because the
migration itself should ensure that it instantiates the right
compiler program if it relies on `@angular/compiler-cli`.
We should remove these options from all migration tests to
ensure that we catch issues with migrations running in version
9 where Ivy is enabled by default.
e.g. e5636a322c
was accidentally hidden due to the `enableIvy: false` option.
PR Close#32954
ec4381d enabled Ivy by default. This is problematic as migrations
like `static-queries` depend on the `AngularCompilerProgram` (NGC)
in order to perform the migration from version 7 to version 8.
In order to ensure that the migration always runs with NGC
(and doesn't get the `NgtscProgram`), we need to explicitly disable
ivy when creating the `@angular/compiler-cli` program for the migration.
This code is still relevant even though the update from version 7
to version 8 landed. Developers can run `ng update` from version 7
and immediately get to version 9 where Ivy is enabled by default (and in
that case we need to ensure that ngtsc is not accidentally used).
Similar to
e5636a322c.
PR Close#32954
In an attempt to be compatible with previous translation files
the Angular compiler was generating instructions that always
included the message id. This was because it was not possible
to accurately re-generate the id from the calls to `$localize()` alone.
In line with https://hackmd.io/EQF4_-atSXK4XWg8eAha2g this
commit changes the compiler so that it only renders ids if they are
"custom" ones provided by the template author.
NOTE:
When translating messages generated by the Angular compiler
from i18n tags in templates, the `$localize.translate()` function
will compute message ids, if no custom id is provided, using a
common digest function that only relies upon the information
available in the `$localize()` calls.
This computed message id will not be the same as the message
ids stored in legacy translation files. Such files will need to be
migrated to use the new common digest function.
This only affects developers who have been trialling `$localize`, have
been calling `loadTranslations()`, and are not exclusively using custom
ids in their templates.
PR Close#32867
Metadata blocks are delimited by colons. Previously the code naively just
looked for the next colon in the string as the end marker.
This commit supports escaping colons within the metadata content.
The Angular compiler has been updated to add escaping as required.
PR Close#32867
Previously the metadata and placeholder blocks were serialized in
a variety of places. Moreover the code for creating the `LocalizedString`
AST node was doing serialization, which break the separation of concerns.
Now this is all done by the code that renders the AST and is refactored into
helper functions to avoid repeating the behaviour.
PR Close#32867
Previously if a translation contains a placeholder that
does not exist in the message being translated, that
placeholder is evaluated as `undefined`.
Translations should never contain such placeholder names
so now `translate` will throw a helpful error in instead.
PR Close#32867
Adds information about the NgModule a Directive is declared in when the
Directive class name is hovered over, in the form
```
(directive) NgModule.Directive: class
```
Closes#32565
PR Close#32763
Similarly to `ts_library` compilation actions, the `ng_module` compile action should include
the current compile mode in the action description. This makes it consistent with `ts_library`
targets and also avoids confusion when both output flavors are requested.
Currently when both output flavors are requested (e.g. in the `ng_package` rule), both
devmode and prodmode compilations have the same action name. This is confusing and
looks like the given target is built *twice* due to a bug (which is obviously not the case though)
PR Close#32955
With #31953 we moved the factories for components, directives and pipes into a new field called `ngFactoryDef`, however I decided not to do it for injectables, because they needed some extra logic. These changes set up the `ngFactoryDef` for injectables as well.
For reference, the extra logic mentioned above is that for injectables we have two code paths:
1. For injectables that don't configure how they should be instantiated, we create a `factory` that proxies to `ngFactoryDef`:
```
// Source
@Injectable()
class Service {}
// Output
class Service {
static ngInjectableDef = defineInjectable({
factory: () => Service.ngFactoryFn(),
});
static ngFactoryFn: (t) => new (t || Service)();
}
```
2. For injectables that do configure how they're created, we keep the `ngFactoryDef` and generate the factory based on the metadata:
```
// Source
@Injectable({
useValue: DEFAULT_IMPL,
})
class Service {}
// Output
export class Service {
static ngInjectableDef = defineInjectable({
factory: () => DEFAULT_IMPL,
});
static ngFactoryFn: (t) => new (t || Service)();
}
```
PR Close#32433
Safari throws an error when the new URL() constructor is called with an
undefined base. This change checks whether the base is undefined and
then calls the corresponding version of the URL constructor.
fix(upgrade): simplify solution by replacing undefined with ''
Co-Authored-By: Pete Bacon Darwin <pete@bacondarwin.com>
Simplify solution by replacing undefined with ''
Co-Authored-By: Pete Bacon Darwin <pete@bacondarwin.com>
fix(upgrade): Avoid passing an empty string as the base as well.
Browsers other than Safari may have issues with the empty string.
PR Close#32959
Switches back to having the `static` flag be optional on `ViewChild` and `ContentChild` queries, in preparation for changing its default value.
PR Close#32686
These changes switch to defaulting the `static` flag on `ViewChild` and `ContentChild` queries to `false`, in addition to removing the logic that statically determines whether a query is dynamic.
PR Close#32720
There are a couple scenarios that are problematic and need special
handling:
1. A user has a custom implementation of lazy-loaded modules, sets some
provider overrides, then compiles the module so it can be loaded. In a
follow-up test, the user sets different overrides for the module and
then compiles. This is problematic because we need to be sure the module
registered in the first test is not used, so we need to clear it out of
the modules list in `ng_module_factory_registration`.
2. A user has a similar lazy-loaded module factory implementation but
relies on the module being registered automatically. This can happen,
for example, as a side effect of importing the ngfactory file.
PR Close#32944
Child component refresh must happen before executing the ViewQueryFn because
child components could insert a template from the host that contains the result
of the ViewQuery function (see related test added in this PR).
PR Close#32922
Sometimes modules retreived from the language service need to be
synchronized to the last time they were updated, and not updated
on-the-fly. This PR adds a flag to
`TypeScriptServiceHost#getAnalyzedModules` that retreives cached
analyzed NgModules rather than potentially recomputing them.
PR Close#32779
This is the last part in refactoring of the test project.
This PR turns on strict mode for typechecking and fixed tests that
fail under this mode.
PR Close#32783
readFileContent() has the exact same functionality as readFile(), but it
is not actually part of ts.LanguageServiceHost interface.
It's not actually needed, so replace it with readFile() instead.
PR Close#32782
This patch changes the Ivy `DebugElement` code to always read style and
class values directly from the native element instead of reading them
through the styling contexts. The reason for this change is because Ivy
does not make use of a debug renderer and will therefore not have access
to any classes/styles applied directly through the renderer (unless it
reads the values directly from the element).
PR Close#32842
Recently ng-packagr was updated to include a transform that used to be
done in tsickle (https://github.com/ng-packagr/ng-packagr/pull/1401),
where only constructor parameter decorators are emitted in tsickle's
format, not any of the other decorators.
ngcc used to extract decorators from only a single format, so once it
saw the `ctorParameters` static property it assumed the library is using
the tsickle format. Therefore, none of the `__decorate` calls were
considered. This resulted in missing decorator information, preventing
proper processing of a package.
This commit changes how decorators are extracted by always looking at
both the static properties and the `__decorate` calls, merging these
sources appropriately.
Resolves FW-1573
PR Close#32901
ngcc may need to insert public exports into the bundle's source as well
as to the entry-point's declaration file, as the Ivy compiler may need
to create import statements to internal library types. The way ngcc
knows which exports to add is through the references registry, to which
references to things that require a public export are added by the
various analysis steps that are executed.
One of these analysis steps is the augmentation of declaration files
where functions that return `ModuleWithProviders` are updated so that a
generic type argument is added that corresponds with the `NgModule` that
is actually imported. This type has to be publicly exported, so the
analyzer step has to add the module type to the references registry.
A problem occurs when `ModuleWithProviders` already has a generic type
argument, in which case no update of the declaration file is necessary.
This may happen when 1) ngcc is processing additional bundle formats, so
that the declaration file has already been updated while processing the
first bundle format, or 2) when a package is processed which already
contains the generic type in its source. In both scenarios it may occur
that the referenced `NgModule` type does not yet have a public export,
so it is crucial that a reference to the type is added to the
references registry, which ngcc failed to do.
This commit fixes the issue by always adding the referenced `NgModule`
type to the references registry, so that a public export will always be
created if necessary.
Resolves FW-1575
PR Close#32902
`InitialNavigation` is used in `ExtraOptions`, which is already part of
the public API. Thus, `InitialNavigation` should be too. Not publicly
exporting it from `router/index.ts` seems an omission, since the type is
already annotated with the `@publicApi` JSDoc tag.
By publicly exporting `InitialNavigation`, it will also correctly appear
in the API docs on angular.io.
PR Close#32707
Prior to this commit, the `ngProjectAs` attribute was only included with a special flag and in a parsed format. As a result, projected node was missing `ngProjectAs` attribute as well as other attributes added after `ngProjectAs` one. This is problematic since app code might rely on the presence of `ngProjectAs` attribute (for example in CSS). This commit fixes the problem by including `ngProjectAs` into attributes array as a regular attribute and also makes sure that the parsed version of the `ngProjectAs` attribute with a special marker is added after regular attributes (thus we set them correctly at runtime). This change also aligns View Engine and Ivy behavior.
PR Close#32784
This release includes a ts_config runfiles fix so also cleaning up the one line work-around from #31943.
This also updates to upstream rules_webtesting browser repositories load("@io_bazel_rules_webtesting//web/versioned:browsers-0.3.2.bzl", "browser_repositories") to fix a breaking change in the chromedriver distro. This bumps up the version of chromium to the version here: https://github.com/bazelbuild/rules_webtesting/blob/master/web/versioned/browsers-0.3.2.bzl
PR Close#32151
This patch fixes a bug where the map-based cursor moves too far and
skips intermediate values when the correct combination of single-prop
bindings and map-based bindings are used together.
PR Close#32774
This patch introduces the `printTable()` and `printSources()`
methods to `DebugStylingContext` which can be used via the
`window.ng.getDebugNode` helpers when debugging an application.
PR Close#32753
This patch enables a styling debug instance (which is apart of the
`debugNode.styles` or `debugNode.classes` data structures) to expose
its context value so that it can be easily debugged.
PR Close#32753
Prior to this patch the `window.ng.getDebugNode` method would fail to
return the debug information for an element that is a host element to
a component.
PR Close#32780
Remove MockData from the constructor parameters of MockTypescriptHost
since the entire Tour of Heroes (TOH) project is now loaded from disk.
Added a new method `reset()` to MockTypescriptHost that is necessary to
reset the state of the project before each spec if run to make sure
previous overrides are cleared.
PR Close#32752
Language service uses a canonical "Tour of Heroes" project to test
various features, but the files are all contained in test_data.ts which
is hard to read and often contains errors that are difficult to catch
without proper IDE syntax highlighting. The directory structure is also
not clear from first glance.
This PR refactors the test project into standalone files in the proper
format.
Next up:
[ ] Update the interface of MockTypeScript to only accept scriptNames.
[ ] Remove test_data.ts
PR Close#32653
This sets up the Language Service to support #32565.
This PR exposes a `getDirectiveModule` method on `TypeScriptServiceHost`
that returns the NgModule owning a Directive given the Directive's
TypeScript node or its Angular `StaticSymbol`. Both types are supported
to reduce extraneous helper methods.
PR Close#32710
Before this refactoring native node `classList` / `style` properties were
read even if not used. The reason for this was desire to avoid code duplication
between procedural and non-procedural renderers. Unfortunatelly for the case
which will be used by most users (a procedura renderer) the `classList` / `style`
properties were read twice, making the `setStyle` \ `setClass` functions the
most expensive ones (self time) in several benchmarks (large table, expanding
rows).
This refactoring adds a bit of code duplication in order to get better
runtime performance. The code duplication will be removed when we drop
checks for a procedural renderer.
PR Close#32716
Currently the expressions used in a template string are automatically named
`PH_1`, `PH_2`, etc. Whereas interpolations used in i18n templates generate
placeholders automatically named `INTERPOLATION`, `INTERPOLATION_1`, etc.
This commit aligns the behaviors by starting the generated placeholder
names for expressions at `PH`, then `PH_1`, etc.
It also documents this behavior in the documentation of `$localize` as
it was not mentioned before.
PR Close#32493
Prior to this patch if any backwards-compatible Angular code was using
Ivy then the built-in `window.ng` debug utilies would not be exposed.
PR Close#32725
Now that the `$localize` translations are `MessageId` based the
compiler must render `MessageId`s in its generated `$localize` code.
This is because the `MessageId` used by the compiler is computed
from information that does not get passed through to the `$localize`
tagged string.
For example, the generated code for the following template
```html
<div id="static" i18n-title="m|d" title="introduction"></div>
```
will contain these localization statements
```ts
if (ngI18nClosureMode) {
/**
* @desc d
* @meaning m
*/
const MSG_EXTERNAL_8809028065680254561$$APP_SPEC_TS_1 = goog.getMsg("introduction");
I18N_1 = MSG_EXTERNAL_8809028065680254561$$APP_SPEC_TS_1;
}
else {
I18N_1 = $localize \`:m|d@@8809028065680254561:introduction\`;
}
```
Since `$localize` is not able to accurately regenerate the source-message
(and so the `MessageId`) from the generated code, it must rely upon the
`MessageId` being provided explicitly in the generated code.
The compiler now prepends all localized messages with a "metadata block"
containing the id (and the meaning and description if defined).
Note that this metadata block will also allow translation file extraction
from the compiled code - rather than relying on the legacy ViewEngine
extraction code. (This will be implemented post-v9).
Although these metadata blocks add to the initial code size, compile-time
inlining will completely remove these strings and so will not impact on
production bundle size.
PR Close#32594
As discussed in https://hackmd.io/33M5Wb-JT7-0fneA0JuHPA `SourceMessage`
strings are not sufficient for matching translations.
This commit updates `@angular/localize` to use `MessageId`s for translation
matching instead.
Also the run-time translation will now log a warning to the console if a
translation is missing.
BREAKING CHANGE:
Translations (loaded via the `loadTranslations()` function) must now use
`MessageId` for the translation key rather than the previous `SourceMessage`
string.
PR Close#32594
Previously the translation key used for translations was the `SourceMessage`
but it turns out that this is insufficient because "meaning" and "custom-id"
metadata affect the translation key.
Now run-time translation is keyed off the `MessageId`.
PR Close#32594
This commit documents and extends the basic `$localize`
implementation to support adding a metadata block to the
start of a tagged message.
All the "pass-though" version does is to strip this block out,
similar to what it does to placeholder name blocks.
PR Close#32594
The `packages/localize/test/utils` folder was not being
included in the unit tests because the glob for the spec
files was only looking in the top level folder.
PR Close#32594
Previously we were looking for a global factory call that looks like:
```ts
(factory((global.ng = global.ng || {}, global.ng.common = {}), global.ng.core))"
```
but in some cases it looks like:
```ts
(global = global || self, factory((global.ng = global.ng || {}, global.ng.common = {}), global.ng.core))"
```
Note the `global = global || self` at the start of the statement.
This commit makes the test when finding the global factory
function call resilient to being in a comma list.
PR Close#32709
Prior to this patch, each time `advance()` would run (or when a
templateFn or hostBindings code exits) then the core change detection
code would check to see whether the styling data needs to be reset. This
patch removes that functionality and places everything inside of the
scheduled styling exit function. This means that each time one or more
styling bindings run (even if the value hasn't changed) then an exit
function will be scheduled and that will do all the cleanup.
PR Close#32591
This patch is a final major refactor in styling Angular.
This PR includes three main fixes:
All temporary state taht is persisted between template style/class application
and style/class application in host bindings is now removed.
Removes the styling() and stylingApply() instructions.
Introduces a "direct apply" mode that is used apply prop-based
style/class in the event that there are no map-based bindings as
well as property collisions.
PR Close#32259
PR Close#32591
Currently all property instructions eventually call into `elementPropertyInternal` which in turn calls to `getLView`, however all of the instructions already have access to the LView. These changes switch to passing in the LView as a parameter.
PR Close#32681
Within an Angular package, it can happen that there are
entry-points which do not contain features that belong into
an `@NgModule` or need metadata files to be generated.
For example: the `cdk`, `cdk/testing` and `cdk/coercion`
entry-points. Besides other entry-points in the `cdk`
package, those entry-points do not need metadata to
be generated and no not use the `ng_module` rule.
Currently the "ng_package" rule properly picks up such
entry-points and builds bundles, does downleveling etc.
The only thing it misses is that no `package.json` files
are generated for the entry-point. This means that consumers
will not be able to use these entry-points built with "ts_library"
(except accessing the individual bundlings explicitly).
The "ng_package" rule should follow the full APF specification
for such entry-points. Partially building bundles and doing the
downleveling is confusing and a breaking issue.
The motifivation of supporting this (besides making the
rule behavior consistent; the incomplete output is not
acceptable), is that using the "ng_module" rule does
not make sense to be used for non-Angular entry-points.
Especially since it depends on Angular packages to
be specified as Bazel action inputs just to compile
vanilla TypeScript with `@angular/compiler-cli`.
PR Close#32610
If an <ng-template> contains a structural directive (for example *ngIf), Ngtsc generates extra template function with 1 template instruction call. When <ng-template> tag also contains i18n attribute on it, we generate i18nStart and i18nEnd instructions around it, which is unnecessary and breaking runtime. This commit adds a logic to make sure we do not generate i18n instructions in case only `template` is present.
PR Close#32623
Removes `addCodeAndCallback` function, opting instead to add code to a
file and then testing expectations on that fileName. Also renames
`contains` to `expectContains` to clarify its expectations.
PR Close#32656
The ModuleResolutionHost implementation inside ReflectorHost currently
relies on reading the snapshot to determine if a file exists, and use
the snapshot to retrieve the file content.
It is more straightforward and efficient to use the already existing
method fileExists() instead.
At runtime, the TypeScript LanguageServiceHost is really a Project, so
both fileExists() and readFile() methods are defined.
As a micro-optimization, skip fs lookup for tsx files.
PR Close#32642
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 PR adds loggin methods to TypeScriptHost so that proper logging
to file could be done.
Three new methods are added: log(), error(), and debug().
PR Close#32645
In ngcc's reflection host for UMD and CommonJS bundles, custom logic is
present to resolve import details of an identifier. However, this custom
logic is unable to resolve an import for an identifier inside of
declaration files, as such files use the regular ESM import syntax.
As a consequence of this limitation, ngtsc is unable to resolve
`ModuleWithProviders` imports that are declared in an external library.
In that situation, ngtsc determines the type of the actual `NgModule`
that is imported, by looking in the library's declaration files for the
generic type argument on `ModuleWithProviders`. In this process, ngtsc
resolves the import for the `ModuleWithProviders` identifier to verify
that it is indeed the `ModuleWithProviders` type from `@angular/core`.
So, when the UMD reflection host was in use this resolution would fail,
therefore no `NgModule` type could be detected.
This commit fixes the bug by using the regular import resolution logic
in addition to the custom resolution logic that is required for UMD
and CommonJS bundles.
Fixes#31791
PR Close#32619
In ESM2015 bundles, a class with decorators may be emitted as follows:
```javascript
var MyClass_1;
let MyClass = MyClass_1 = class MyClass {};
MyClass.decorators = [/* here be decorators */];
```
Such a class has two declarations: the publicly visible `let MyClass`
and the implementation `class MyClass {}` node. In #32539 a refactoring
took place to handle such classes more consistently, however the logic
to find static properties was mistakenly kept identical to its broken
state before the refactor, by looking for static properties on the
implementation symbol (the one for `class MyClass {}`) whereas the
static properties need to be obtained from the symbol corresponding with
the `let MyClass` declaration, as that is where the `decorators`
property is assigned to in the example above.
This commit fixes the behavior by looking for static properties on the
public declaration symbol. This fixes an issue where decorators were not
found for classes that do in fact have decorators, therefore preventing
the classes from being compiled for Ivy.
Fixes#31791
PR Close#32619
This perf-focused refactoring moves the TNode's input / output initialization
logic to the first template pass - close to the place where directives are
matched and resolved.
This code change makes it possible to update-mode checks for both property
bindings and listeners registration.
PR Close#32608
`templateUrls` that do not point to actual files are now diagnosed as such
by the Language Service. Support for `styleUrls` will come in a next PR.
This introduces a utility method `getPropertyValueOfType` that scans
TypeScript ASTs until a property assignment whose initializer of a
certain type is found. This PR also notices a couple of things that
could be improved in the language-service implementation, such as
enumerating directive properties and unifying common logic, that will be
fixed in future PRs.
Part of #32564.
PR Close#32586
In ngcc's reflection hosts for compiled JS bundles, such as ESM2015,
special care needs to be taken for classes as there may be an outer
declaration (referred to as "declaration") and an inner declaration
(referred to as "implementation") for a given class. Therefore, there
will also be two `ts.Symbol`s bound per class, and ngcc needs to switch
between those declarations and symbols depending on where certain
information can be found.
Prior to this commit, the `NgccReflectionHost` interface had methods
`getClassSymbol` and `findClassSymbols` that would return a `ts.Symbol`.
These class symbols would be used to kick off compilation of components
using ngtsc, so it is important for these symbols to correspond with the
publicly visible outer declaration of the class. However, the ESM2015
reflection host used to return the `ts.Symbol` for the inner
declaration, if the class was declared as follows:
```javascript
var MyClass = class MyClass {};
```
For the above code, `Esm2015ReflectionHost.getClassSymbol` would return
the `ts.Symbol` corresponding with the `class MyClass {}` declaration,
whereas it should have corresponded with the `var MyClass` declaration.
As a consequence, no `NgModule` could be resolved for the component, so
no components/directives would be in scope for the component. This
resulted in errors during runtime.
This commit resolves the issue by introducing a `NgccClassSymbol` that
contains references to both the outer and inner `ts.Symbol`, instead of
just a single `ts.Symbol`. This avoids the unclarity of whether a
`ts.Symbol` corresponds with the outer or inner declaration.
More details can be found here: https://hackmd.io/7nkgWOFWQlSRAuIW_8KPPwFixes#32078
Closes FW-1507
PR Close#32539
All of the `pipeBind` instructions call into `isPure` and `unwrapValue` which in turn call `getLView` internally. These internal calls are redundant, because we already have the `LView` from the `load` calls just before it.
PR Close#32633
Before this refactoring we had 2 utility functions to check if a given
TNode has matching directives. This PR leaves just one such function
(one that does less memory read).
PR Close#32495
The instantiation of the resolver also requires instantiation of the
StaticReflector, and the latter requires resolution of core Angular symbols.
Module resolution should not be done during instantiation to avoid potential
cyclic dependency between the plugin and the containing Project, so the
Singleton pattern is used to create the resolver.
PR Close#32631
While determining a property name to bind to we were checking a mapping object
resulting in the megamorphic read. Replacing such read with a series of if checks
speeds up rproprty update benchmark ~30% (~1400ms down to ~1000ms).
PR Close#32574
Ensures that the "core_all:size_test" target runs with "--define=compile=aot".
This is necessary because we don't run this test on CI currently, but if we run
it manually, we need to ensure that it runs with Ivy for proper size comparisons.
PR Close#32613
Presumably, the size of the results array was checked so that a TS
source file wouldn't have to be created if there were no diagnostics.
However, it is very likely that a TS program already has the
`ts.SourceFile` for file when diagnostics are queried. This removal is
just to make the function a minimal amount simpler.
PR Close#32587
This patch is a final major refactor in styling Angular.
This PR includes three main fixes:
All temporary state taht is persisted between template style/class application
and style/class application in host bindings is now removed.
Removes the styling() and stylingApply() instructions.
Introduces a "direct apply" mode that is used apply prop-based
style/class in the event that there are no map-based bindings as
well as property collisions.
PR Close#32259
PR Close#32596
This patch is a final major refactor in styling Angular.
This PR includes three main fixes:
All temporary state taht is persisted between template style/class application
and style/class application in host bindings is now removed.
Removes the styling() and stylingApply() instructions.
Introduces a "direct apply" mode that is used apply prop-based
style/class in the event that there are no map-based bindings as
well as property collisions.
PR Close#32259
BREAKING CHANGE:
Angular bazel users using protractor_web_test_suite from @angular/bazel npm package should now switch to the @bazel/protractor npm package.
This should impact very few users and the user's that are impacted have a very easy upgrade path to switch to fetching the protractor_web_test_suite rule via the @bazel/protractor npm package.
PR Close#32485
This PR fixes a critical performance issue where the language
service makes a MASSIVE number of filesystem calls when performing
module resolution.
This is because there is no caching. To make matters worse, module
resolution is performed for **every** program change (which means every
few keystrokes trigger a massive number of fs calls).
PR Close#32479
Prior to this commit, a directive with a selector `selector=".Titledir"` would not match an element like `div class="titleDir"` in Ivy whereas it would in VE. The same issue was present for `selector="[title=Titledir]` and `title="titleDir"`. This fixes the Ivy behavior by changing the matching algorithm to use lowercased values.
Note that some `render3` tests needed to be changed to reflect that the compiler generates lowercase selectors. These tests are in the process to be migrated to `acceptance` to use `TestBed` in another PR anyway.
PR Close#32548
Adds two acceptance tests to show a current difference in behavior between Ivy and VE.
A directive with a selector `.Titledir` matches an element with `class="titleDir"` in VE but not in Ivy.
Same thing for an attribute value.
PR Close#32548
Prior to this commit, the `previousOrParentTNode` was set to null after performing all operations within `refreshView` function. It's causing problems in more complex scenarios, for example when change detection is triggered during DI (see test added as a part of this commit). As a result, global state might be corrupted. This commit captures current value of `previousOrParentTNode` and restores it after `refreshView` call.
PR Close#32521
Replaces the `select` instruction with a new one called `advance`. Instead of the jumping to a specific index, the new instruction goes forward X amount of elements. The advantage of doing this is that it should generate code the compresses better.
PR Close#32516
The `goog.getMsg()` function requires placeholder names to be camelCased.
This is not the case for `$localize`. Here placeholder names need
match what is serialized to translation files.
Specifically such placeholder names keep their casing but have all characters
that are not in `a-z`, `A-Z`, `0-9` and `_` converted to `_`.
PR Close#32509
Prior to this change, the template source mapping details were always
built during the analysis phase, under the assumption that pre-analysed
templates would always correspond with external templates. This has
turned out to be a false assumption, as inline templates are also
pre-analyzed to be able to preload any stylesheets included in the
template.
This commit fixes the bug by capturing the template source mapping
details at the moment the template is parsed, which is either during the
preanalysis phase when preloading is available, or during the analysis
phase when preloading is not supported.
Tests have been added to exercise the template error mapping in
asynchronous compilations where preloading is enabled, similar to how
the CLI performs compilations.
Fixes#32538
PR Close#32544
Adds support for `styleUrls` definitions in the same way `templateUrl`
definitions are provided; clicking on styleUrl will take a user to the
respective file.
Unifies some code in determining a URL definition. We first check if a
url is a `templateUrl`; if it's not, we check that it's a `styleUrl` or
return no definitions.
PR Close#32464
This gives an overview of how much time is spent in each operation/phase
and makes it easy to do rough comparisons of how different
configurations or changes affect performance.
PR Close#32427
`ngcc` supports both synchronous and asynchronous execution. The default
mode when using `ngcc` programmatically (which is how `@angular/cli` is
using it) is synchronous. When running `ngcc` from the command line
(i.e. via the `ivy-ngcc` script), it runs in async mode.
Previously, the work would be executed in the same way in both modes.
This commit improves the performance of `ngcc` in async mode by
processing tasks in parallel on multiple processes. It uses the Node.js
built-in [`cluster` module](https://nodejs.org/api/cluster.html) to
launch a cluster of Node.js processes and take advantage of multi-core
systems.
Preliminary comparisons indicate a 1.8x to 2.6x speed improvement when
processing the angular.io app (apparently depending on the OS, number of
available cores, system load, etc.). Further investigation is needed to
better understand these numbers and identify potential areas of
improvement.
Inspired by/Based on @alxhub's prototype: alxhub/angular@cb631bdb1
Original design doc: https://hackmd.io/uYG9CJrFQZ-6FtKqpnYJAA?view
Jira issue: [FW-1460](https://angular-team.atlassian.net/browse/FW-1460)
PR Close#32427
This commit adds a new `TaskQueue` implementation that supports
executing multiple tasks in parallel (while respecting interdependencies
between them).
This new implementation is currently not used, thus the behavior of
`ngcc` is not affected by this change. The parallel `TaskQueue` will be
used in a subsequent commit that will introduce parallel task execution.
PR Close#32427
This change does not alter the current behavior, but makes it easier to
introduce `TaskQueue`s implementing different task selection algorithms,
for example to support executing multiple tasks in parallel (while
respecting interdependencies between them).
Inspired by/Based on @alxhub's prototype: alxhub/angular@cb631bdb1
PR Close#32427
Previously, `ngcc` needed to store some metadata related to the
processing of each entry-point. This metadata was stored in a `Map`, in
the form of `EntryPointProcessingMetadata` and passed around as needed.
After some recent refactorings, it turns out that this metadata (with
its only remaining property, `hasProcessedTypings`) was no longer used,
because the relevant information was extracted from other sources (such
as the `processDts` property on `Task`s).
This commit cleans up the code by removing the unused code and types.
PR Close#32427
In the past, a task's processability didn't use to be known in advance.
It was possible that a task would be created and added to the queue
during the analysis phase and then later (during the compilation phase)
it would be found out that the task (i.e. the associated format
property) was not processable.
As a result, certain checks had to be delayed, until a task's processing
had started or even until all tasks had been processed. Examples of
checks that had to be delayed are:
- Whether a task can be skipped due to `compileAllFormats: false`.
- Whether there were entry-points for which no format at all was
successfully processed.
It turns out that (as made clear by the refactoring in 9537b2ff8), once
a task starts being processed it is expected to either complete
successfully (with the associated format being processed) or throw an
error (in which case the process will exit). In other words, a task's
processability is known in advance.
This commit takes advantage of this fact by moving certain checks
earlier in the process (e.g. in the analysis phase instead of the
compilation phase), which in turn allows avoiding some unnecessary work.
More specifically:
- When `compileAllFormats` is `false`, tasks are created _only_ for the
first suitable format property for each entry-point, since the rest of
the tasks would have been skipped during the compilation phase anyway.
This has the following advantages:
1. It avoids the slight overhead of generating extraneous tasks and
then starting to process them (before realizing they should be
skipped).
2. In a potential future parallel execution mode, unnecessary tasks
might start being processed at the same time as the first (useful)
task, even if their output would be later discarded, wasting
resources. Alternatively, extra logic would have to be added to
prevent this from happening. The change in this commit avoids these
issues.
- When an entry-point is not processable, an error will be thrown
upfront without having to wait for other tasks to be processed before
failing.
PR Close#32427
Previously, `ngcc`'s programmatic API would run and complete
synchronously. This was necessary for specific usecases (such as how the
`@angular/cli` invokes `ngcc` as part of the TypeScript module
resolution process), but not for others (e.g. running `ivy-ngcc` as a
`postinstall` script).
This commit adds a new option (`async`) that enables turning on
asynchronous execution. I.e. it signals that the caller is OK with the
function call to complete asynchronously, which allows `ngcc` to
potentially run in a more efficient mode.
Currently, there is no difference in the way tasks are executed in sync
vs async mode, but this change sets the ground for adding new execution
options (that require asynchronous operation), such as processing tasks
in parallel on multiple processes.
NOTE:
When using the programmatic API, the default value for `async` is
`false`, thus retaining backwards compatibility.
When running `ngcc` from the command line (i.e. via the `ivy-ngcc`
script), it runs in async mode (to be able to take advantage of future
optimizations), but that is transparent to the caller.
PR Close#32427
This change does not alter the current behavior, but makes it easier to
introduce new types of `Executors` , for example to do the required work
in parallel (on multiple processes).
Inspired by/Based on @alxhub's prototype: alxhub/angular@cb631bdb1
PR Close#32427
To persist some of its state, `ngcc` needs to update `package.json`
files (both in memory and on disk).
This refactoring abstracts these operations behind the
`PackageJsonUpdater` interface, making it easier to orchestrate them
from different contexts (e.g. when running tasks in parallel on multiple
processes).
Inspired by/Based on @alxhub's prototype: alxhub/angular@cb631bdb1
PR Close#32427
In order to prevent `ngcc`'d packages (e.g. libraries) from getting
accidentally published, `ngcc` overwrites the `prepublishOnly` npm
script to log a warning and exit with an error. In case we want to
restore the original script (e.g. "undo" `ngcc` processing), we keep a
backup of the original `prepublishOnly` script.
Previously, running `ngcc` a second time (e.g. for a different format)
would create a backup of the overwritten `prepublishOnly` script (if
there was originally no `prepublishOnly` script). As a result, if we
ever tried to "undo" `ngcc` processing and restore the original
`prepublishOnly` script, the error-throwing script would be restored
instead.
This commit fixes it by ensuring that we only back up a `prepublishOnly`
script, iff it is not the one we created ourselves (i.e. the
error-throwing one).
PR Close#32427
This PR partially fixes a circular dependency problem whereby the
creation of a project queries Angular plugin for external files, but
the discovery of external files requires root files to be defined in a
Project. The right approach is to return empty array if Project has no
root files.
PR Close#32519
Logs a warning instead of throwing when running into a binding to an unknown property in JIT mode. Since we aren't using a schema for the runtime validation anymore, this allows us to support browsers where properties are unsupported.
PR Close#32463
Prior to this commit, listeners order was not preserved in case we coalesce them to avoid triggering unnecessary change detection cycles. For performance reasons we were attaching listeners to existing events at head (always using first listener as an anchor), to avoid going through the list, thus breaking the order in which listeners are registered. In some scenarios this order might be important (for example with `ngModelChange` and `input` listeners), so this commit updates the logic to put new listeners at the end of the list. In order to avoid performance implications, we keep a pointer to the last listener in the list, so adding a new listener takes constant amount of time.
PR Close#32484
We need to be clearer to developers who upgrade to v9 (next) and get this
error, why they have a problem and what they have to do about it.
Once we have a better CLI schematics story, where this import will be
included by default in new applications and a CLI migration will add it
when upgrading apps to v9, we could simplify or remove this error message.
PR Close#32491
Fixes an issue where Ivy incorrectly inserts items in the beginning of an `ngFor`, if the `ngFor` is set on an `ng-container`. The issue comes from the fact that we choose the `ng-container` comment node as the anchor point before which to insert the content, however the node might be after any of the nodes inside the container. These changes switch to picking out the first node inside of the container instead.
PR Close#32324
Historically bind() used to be a separate instruction. With a series of
refactoring it became a utility function but after recent code changes
it does not provide any valuable abstraction / help. On the contrary -
it can be seen as a performance problem (forces unnecessary comparison to
`NO_CHANGE` during change detection).
PR Close#32489
Prior to this commit, complex expressions (that require additional statements to be generated) were handled incorrectly in case they were used in attributes annotated with i18n flags. The problem was caused by the fact that extra statements were not appended to the temporary vars block, so they were missing in generated code. This commit updated the logic to use the `convertPropertyBinding`, which contains the necessary code to append extra statements. The `convertExpressionBinding` function was removed as it duplicates the `convertPropertyBinding` one (for the most part) and is no longer used.
PR Close#32309
Previously, when the ServiceWorker entered a degraded mode
(`EXISTING_CLIENTS_ONLY` or `SAFE_MODE`) it would remain in that mode
for the rest of the lifetime of ServiceWorker instance. Note that
ServiceWorkers are stopped by the browser after a certain period of
inactivity and a new instance is created as soon as the ServiceWorker
needs to handle an event (such as a request from the page). Those new
instances would start from the `NORMAL` mode.
The reason for this behavior is to err on the side of caution: If we
can't be sure why the ServiceWorker entered the degraded mode, it is
risky to try recovering on the same instance and might lead to
unexpected behavior.
However, it turns out that the `EXISTING_CLIENTS_ONLY` mode can only be
a result of some error happening with the latest version (e.g. a hash
mismatch in the manifest). Therefore, it is safe to recover from that
mode once a new, valid update is successfully installed and to start
accepting new clients.
This commit ensures that the mode is set back to `NORMAL`, when (a) an
update is successfully installed and (b) the current mode is
`EXISTING_CLIENTS_ONLY`.
Besides making the behavior more predictable (instead of relying on the
browser to decide when to terminate the current ServiceWorker instance
and create a new one), this change can also improve the developer
experience:
When people notice the error during debugging and fix it by deploying a
new version (either to production or locally), it is confusing that the
ServiceWorker will fetch and install the update (as seen by the requests
in the Network panel in DevTools) but not serve it to clients. With this
change, the update will be served to new clients as soon as it is
installed.
Fixes#31109
PR Close#31865
Previously, when the latest version was invalidated (e.g. due to a hash
mismatch), the SW entered a degraded `EXISTING_CLIENTS_ONLY` mode and
removed _all_ clients from its client-version map (essentially stopping
to serve any clients). Based on the code and surrounding comments, the
intention seems to have been to only remove clients that were on the
invalidated version, but keep other clients on older versions.
This commit fixes it by only unassigning clients what were on the latest
version and keep clients assigned to older versions.
PR Close#31865
Helper functions for making navigation requests were created in several
places inside the test suite, so this commit creates a top-level such
helper and uses that in all tests that need it.
PR Close#31865
The `latest` argument was only ever set to the value of comparing
`this.latestHash` with the `appVersion` hash, which is already computed
inside `versionFailed()`, so there is no reason to pass it as an
argument as well.
This doesn't have any impact on the current behavior of the SW.
PR Close#31865
Previously the template compiler would generate the same jsdoc comment
block for `$localize` as for `goog.getMsg()`. But it turns out that
the closure compiler will complain if the `@desc` and `@meaning`
tags are used for non-`getMsg()` calls.
For now we do not generate the comments for `$localize` calls. They are
not being used at the moment.
In the future it would be good to be able to extract the descriptions and
meanings from the `$localize` calls rather than relying upon the `getMsg()`
calls, which we do now. So we need to find a workaround for this constraint.
PR Close#32473
Prior to this fix if a `NO_CHANGE` value was assigned to a binding, or
an interpolation value rendererd a `NO_CHANGE` value, then the presence
of that value would cause the internal counter index values to not
increment properly. This patch ensures that this doesn't happen and
that the counter/bitmask values update accordingly.
PR Close#32143
This is a prerequisite to fix a bug in template completions whereby
completion of the string `ti` for the variable `title` results in
`tititle`.
This is because the position where the completion is requested is used
to insert the completion text. This is incorrect. Instead, a
`replacementSpan` should be used to indicate the span of text that needs
to be replaced. Angular's own `Completion` interface is insufficient to
hold this information. Instead, we should just use ts.CompletionEntry.
Also added string enum for `CompletionKind`, which is similar to
ts.ScriptElementKind but contains more info about HTML entities.
PR Close#32375
PR #32154 introduced `platform` and `any` for `providedIn` and the doc has a minor typo.
Also a test name was not changed accordingly to the refactoring done.
PR Close#32410
Since property binding metadata storage is guarded with the ngDevMode now
and several instructions were merged together, we can simplify the way we
store and read property binding metadata.
PR Close#32457