With these changes, the types are a little stricter now and also not
compatible with Protractor's jasmine-like syntax. So, we have to also
use `@types/jasminewd2` for e2e tests (but not for non-e2e tests).
I also had to "augment" `@types/jasminewd2`, because the latest
typings from [DefinitelyTyped][1] do not reflect the fact that the
`jasminewd2` version (v2.1.0) currently used by Protractor supports
passing a `done` callback to a spec.
[1]: 566e039485/types/jasminewd2/index.d.ts (L9-L15)Fixes#23952Closes#24733
PR Close#19904
We must always use 1., 2. etc, to indicate ordered lists, even for sub-lists.
We can change the sublist to display as a., b. etc, via CSS.
PR Close#18487
PR Close#18487
All errors for existing fields have been detected and suppressed with a
`!` assertion.
Issue/24571 is tracking proper clean up of those instances.
One-line change required in ivy/compilation.ts, because it appears that
the new syntax causes tsickle emitted node to no longer track their
original sourceFiles.
PR Close#24572
Two new CircleCI environments are created: test_ivy_jit and test_ivy_aot.
Both run a subset of the tests that have been marked with Bazel tags as
being appropriate for that environment.
Once all the tests pass, builds are published to the *-builds repo both
for the legacy View Engine compiled code as well as for ivy-jit and ivy-aot.
PR Close#24309
This lets projects like Material change ng_package "bundle index" files to non-conflicting paths
Currently packages like @angular/core ship with the generated metadata
in a path like 'core.js' which overwrites one of the inputs.
Angular material puts the generated file in a path like 'index.js'
Either way these files generated by ng_module rules have the potential
to collide with inputs given by the user, which results in an error.
Instead, give users the freedom to choose a different non-conflicting name.
Also this refactors the ng_package rule, removing the redundant
secondary_entry_points attribute.
Instead, we assume that any ng_module in the deps with a module_name
attribute is a secondary entry point.
PR Close#22814
Changes would not propagate to a value in downgraded component in case you had two-way binding and listening to a value-change, e.g. [(value)]="value" (value-change)="fetch()"
Closes#22734
PR Close#22772
This flag is picked up by webpack v4 and used for more agressive optimizations.
Our code is already side-effect free, because that's what we needed for build-optimizer to work.
PR Close#22785
Angular Package Format v6 stops bundling files in the esm5 and esm2015
directories, now that Webpack 4 can tree-shake per-file.
Adds some missing files like package.json to make packages closer to
what we publish today.
Refactor ng_package to be a type of npm_package and re-use the packaging
action from that rule.
PR Close#22782
We now create npm packages to cover all the public api assertions in tools/public_api_guard.
We no longer depend on ts-api-guardian from npm - it is now stale since the repository was archived.
There is no longer a gulp task to enforce or accept the public API, this is in CircleCI as part of running all bazel test targets.
PR Close#22639
BREAKING CHANGE: after this change, npm and yarn will issue incompatible peerDependencies warning
We don't expect this to actually break an application, but the application/library package.json
will need to be updated to provide tslib 1.9.0 or higher.
PR Close#22667
"ng update" supports having multiple packages as part of a group which should be updated together, meaning that e.g. calling "ng update @angular/core" would be equivalent to updating all packages of the group (that are part of the package.json already).
In order to support the grouping feature, the package.json of the version the user is updating to needs to include an "ng-update" key that points to this metadata.
The entire specification for the update workflow can be found here: 2e8b12a4ef/docs/specifications/update.md
PR Close#22482
Previously, when a downgraded component was destroyed in a way that did
not trigger the `$destroy` event on the element (e.g. when a parent
element was removed from the DOM by Angular, not AngularJS), the
`ComponentRef` was not destroyed and unregistered.
This commit fixes it by listening for the `$destroy` event on both the
element and the scope.
Fixes#22392
PR Close#22400
The function provided by `ngUpgrade` as `parentBoundTranscludeFn` when
upgrading a component with transclusion, will break in AngularJS v1.5.8+
if no transclusion content is provided. The reason is that AngularJS
will try to destroy the transclusion scope (which would not be needed
any more). But since the transcluded content comes from Angular, not
AngularJS, there is no transclusion scope to destroy.
This commit fixes it by providing a dummy scope object with a no-op
`$destroy()` method.
Fixes#22175
PR Close#22167
Previously, having a `=` binding on an upgraded components would result
in setting the corresponding property to an EventEmitter function. This
should only happen for `&` bindings.
This commit rstrores the correct behavior.
Note:
The issue was only present in the dynamic version of `ngUpgrade`. The
static version worked as expected.
The error did not show up in tests, because in AngularJS v1.5.x a
function would be serialized to an empty string in interpolations, thus
making them indistinguishable from uninitialized properties (in the
view). The serialization behavior changed in AngularJS v1.6.x, making
the errors visible.
PR Close#22167
`packages/upgrade/static/src` is anymlink to `packages/upgrade/src`.
Still, using the correct paths (e.g. using
`@angular/upgrade/static/src/...` for `@angula/upgrade/static` specs
ensures that the module loader (e.g. SystemJS) can map the imports to
the same instances.
PR Close#22167
This helps ensure we use the same tsconfig.json file for all compilations.
Next steps are to make it the same tsconfig.json file used by the editor
PR Close#20964