Refactor EventEmitter and Async Facade to match ES7 Observable semantics, properly use RxJS typedefs, make EventEmitter inherit from RxJS Subject. Closes#4149.
BREAKING CHANGE:
- consumers of EventEmitter no longer need to call .toRx()
- EventEmitter is now generic and requires a type - e.g. `EventEmitter<string>`
- EventEmitter and Observable now use the `.subscribe(generatorOrNext, error, complete)` method instead of `.observer(generator)`
- ObservableWrapper uses `callNext/callError/callComplete` instead of `callNext/callThrow/callReturn`
We used to use different external css parsers,
depending on the `DomAdapter`. This lead to
inconsistent behavior and environment specific errors.
Closes#5006Closes#4993
Since the very first npm install is called while node_modules is empty, we need to ignore it, but we can track
the start timestamp and record the install even once the installation is completed.
We've had issues such as the one I documented: https://github.com/Microsoft/TypeScript/issues/5187
This tslint check prevents this happening again.
This change also updates to the newest tslint which gets typings from npm.
Closes#4970
This was used for , but now that our typings are laid out in the node_module, users should no longer need that.
Also fix the project name in root package.json. There is a risk that someone runs npm publish in this directory, which will create a new version of angular 1, and contain a scary source tree.
So this package.json may as well have a name that doesn't exist on npm, and if we did publish by accident, it would be a package name that matches the contents.
This is pretty experimental, but the goal is to track the performance
of our build over time so that we can more easily track perf regressions.
Currently it's integrated only with gulp tasks, but I'd like to expand it
to tracking travis jobs, protractor/benchpress test runs, npm installs, etc.
No PII is being collected. And the data is collected via a Google Analytics
property owned by the Angular team account.
Closes#4672
These dependencies required upgrade in order for us to run on Node v4.x
chokidar 1.0.1 -> 1.1.0
karma 0.12.23 -> 0.13.10
karma-chorome-launcher 0.1.8 -> 0.2.0
karma-cli 0.0.4 -> 0.1.0
karma-dart 0.2.8 -> 0.3.0
karma-sauce-launcher 0.2.11 -> 0.2.14
This was a poorly typed attempt to mimic TypeScript's index signatures,
which we can use instead.
This eliminates a very strange type that we were exposing to users, but
not re-exporting through our public API.
Fixes#4483