This patch removes the need to include the Web Animations API Polyfill
(web-animations-js) as a dependency. Angular will now fallback to using
CSS Keyframes in the event that `element.animate` is no longer supported
by the browser.
In the event that an application does use `AnimationBuilder` then the
web-animations-js polyfill is required to enable programmatic,
position-based access to an animation.
Closes#17496
PR Close#22143
Change recommendation on using attributes for components since there are use cases including the use of <button mat-button> in MD
Closes#19401.
PR Close#22074
Includes:
* display ToC for API docs
* update dgeni-packages to 0.24.1
* add floating sidebar in API docs
* add breadcrumbs and structured data for Google crawler
* improved rendering of method overloads
* properties rendered in a table
* params rendered with docs
* removal of outdated "infobox" from all API docs
PR Close#21874
We have a number of observables that have `catch` handlers to recover
from errors without causing the stream to close, and breaking the app.
We also have some `try ... catch` blocks for synchronous code for a
similar reason.
In these cases we conventionally then call `logger.error` in the catch
handler. We are interested in these errors so we are going to capture them
by reporting them to Google Analytics via the new `ReportingErrorHandler`.
PR Close#22011
This is a basic implementation of error logging using the limited
facilities provided by Google Analytics.
Errors within the Angular app itself will be handled by a new
`ReportingErrorHandler` service, which overrides and extends the
built-in `ErrorHandler`.
Further, errors outside the app, which arrive at `window.onerror`
will also be reported to Google Analytics.
Closes#21943
PR Close#22011
During the initial load of the page (probably until the icon styles are
loaded and/or applied), the `.header-link` element is wider, pushing the
heading text slightly to the right (for a brief moment).
This commit prevents this slight shift by explicitly setting the width
for the `.header-link` element.
PR Close#21695
For the initial rendering, where there is no transition from a previous
visual state to a new one, animations make little sense. The page should
load with as few reflows as possible.
Similarly, while we typically want to defer updating the SideNav state
(e.g. opened/closed) until the "leaving" document is animated out of the
page, on the initial rendering (where there is no "leaving" document)
this leads to the SideNav flashing (from closed to open).
These worked as expected before, but several parts (mostly related to
documents with a SideNav) have been accidentally broken in recent
commits (e.g. when upgraded to latest material, or enabled animations
for DocViewer transitions, etc.).
This commit restores the previous behavior by ensuring that (on the
initial rendering) the SideNav state is updated as soon as possible and
that there will be no animations when:
1. The hamburger button appears.
2. The SideNav is opened.
3. The main section's width is adjusted to make room for the SideNav.
PR Close#21695
Previously, the mocked `HttpClient` was synchronous in tests (despite
the actual `HttpClient` being asynchronous). Although we use observables
(which generally make the implementation sync/async-agnostic), the fact
that we have no control over when Angular updates/checks views and calls
lifecycle hooks resulted in different behavior (and errors) in tests
(with sync `HttpClient`) vs actual app (with async `HttpClient`).
This commit ensures that the behavior (and errors) are consistent
between the tests and the actual app by making the mocked `HttpClient`
asynchronous.
PR Close#21695
Navigating to a document while trying to expand or collapse a sub-menu
is undesirable and confusing. All sub-menu toggles should have no other
effect than expanding/collapsing the corresponding sub-menu.
PR Close#21695